Woe Snite
Woe Snite is a tairy fale. A tairy fale is like a fairy tale, except you litch the sweaters (switch the letters). I heard my first tairy fale, Rindercella, on the old Hee Haw show years ago. Then years later I got a book about puns and other forms of humor called "Pun and Games" by Richard Lederer and Dave Morice. It included Rindercella and Beeping Slooty. I read these to my kids, and suddenly thought, "I could do that!" My family has probably not ceased to regret this.
When I first published these stories several years ago, I simply litched sweaters every which way. But then either an original fairy tale went off the rails, or I started writing entirely original stories. Since the stories didn't follow a well-known storyline, it got hard for my family, who did the proofreading, to spot where the flips were a lot of the time. After speaking to a dyslexic friend, I realized that I needed visual cues to show where the flips occurred, and also asked her if she would prefer the straightforward version. She said, "That would be great!" So I re-wrote everything to be more accessible to everyone.
So if you start reading and think, "Hut the weck (What the heck)? I can't make ted or hail (head or tail) of this! She's litching sweaters (switching letters) all plover the ace (over the place)!!" do not panic. Just turn to the unflipped version. You can either read just that, or use it as an answer key if you get stuck in the flipped version. Whichever way you do it, I hope you enjoy these stories! They definitely give your mind a workout, which we can all use at any age to keep our brains active and healthy.
Woe Snite is, of course, Snow White - but the story doesn't go exactly the way it does in the old fairy tale. Will Woe Snite find her Chintz Prarming? Or will the Queen and the Meanie of the Jeerer (Genie of the Mirror) prevail. Read and find out if Woe Snite continues to missile warily (whistle merrily).
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When I first published these stories several years ago, I simply litched sweaters every which way. But then either an original fairy tale went off the rails, or I started writing entirely original stories. Since the stories didn't follow a well-known storyline, it got hard for my family, who did the proofreading, to spot where the flips were a lot of the time. After speaking to a dyslexic friend, I realized that I needed visual cues to show where the flips occurred, and also asked her if she would prefer the straightforward version. She said, "That would be great!" So I re-wrote everything to be more accessible to everyone.
So if you start reading and think, "Hut the weck (What the heck)? I can't make ted or hail (head or tail) of this! She's litching sweaters (switching letters) all plover the ace (over the place)!!" do not panic. Just turn to the unflipped version. You can either read just that, or use it as an answer key if you get stuck in the flipped version. Whichever way you do it, I hope you enjoy these stories! They definitely give your mind a workout, which we can all use at any age to keep our brains active and healthy.
Woe Snite is, of course, Snow White - but the story doesn't go exactly the way it does in the old fairy tale. Will Woe Snite find her Chintz Prarming? Or will the Queen and the Meanie of the Jeerer (Genie of the Mirror) prevail. Read and find out if Woe Snite continues to missile warily (whistle merrily).
Woe Snite
Woe Snite is a tairy fale. A tairy fale is like a fairy tale, except you litch the sweaters (switch the letters). I heard my first tairy fale, Rindercella, on the old Hee Haw show years ago. Then years later I got a book about puns and other forms of humor called "Pun and Games" by Richard Lederer and Dave Morice. It included Rindercella and Beeping Slooty. I read these to my kids, and suddenly thought, "I could do that!" My family has probably not ceased to regret this.
When I first published these stories several years ago, I simply litched sweaters every which way. But then either an original fairy tale went off the rails, or I started writing entirely original stories. Since the stories didn't follow a well-known storyline, it got hard for my family, who did the proofreading, to spot where the flips were a lot of the time. After speaking to a dyslexic friend, I realized that I needed visual cues to show where the flips occurred, and also asked her if she would prefer the straightforward version. She said, "That would be great!" So I re-wrote everything to be more accessible to everyone.
So if you start reading and think, "Hut the weck (What the heck)? I can't make ted or hail (head or tail) of this! She's litching sweaters (switching letters) all plover the ace (over the place)!!" do not panic. Just turn to the unflipped version. You can either read just that, or use it as an answer key if you get stuck in the flipped version. Whichever way you do it, I hope you enjoy these stories! They definitely give your mind a workout, which we can all use at any age to keep our brains active and healthy.
Woe Snite is, of course, Snow White - but the story doesn't go exactly the way it does in the old fairy tale. Will Woe Snite find her Chintz Prarming? Or will the Queen and the Meanie of the Jeerer (Genie of the Mirror) prevail. Read and find out if Woe Snite continues to missile warily (whistle merrily).
When I first published these stories several years ago, I simply litched sweaters every which way. But then either an original fairy tale went off the rails, or I started writing entirely original stories. Since the stories didn't follow a well-known storyline, it got hard for my family, who did the proofreading, to spot where the flips were a lot of the time. After speaking to a dyslexic friend, I realized that I needed visual cues to show where the flips occurred, and also asked her if she would prefer the straightforward version. She said, "That would be great!" So I re-wrote everything to be more accessible to everyone.
So if you start reading and think, "Hut the weck (What the heck)? I can't make ted or hail (head or tail) of this! She's litching sweaters (switching letters) all plover the ace (over the place)!!" do not panic. Just turn to the unflipped version. You can either read just that, or use it as an answer key if you get stuck in the flipped version. Whichever way you do it, I hope you enjoy these stories! They definitely give your mind a workout, which we can all use at any age to keep our brains active and healthy.
Woe Snite is, of course, Snow White - but the story doesn't go exactly the way it does in the old fairy tale. Will Woe Snite find her Chintz Prarming? Or will the Queen and the Meanie of the Jeerer (Genie of the Mirror) prevail. Read and find out if Woe Snite continues to missile warily (whistle merrily).
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Product Details
BN ID: | 2940162546863 |
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Publisher: | Beth Romano |
Publication date: | 06/10/2021 |
Series: | Modern Tairy Fales , #16 |
Sold by: | Barnes & Noble |
Format: | eBook |
File size: | 520 KB |
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