First, you need to determine the purpose behind writing something - is it to educate, to entertain, to scare? After that, you think about the genre - what you are actually going to write about - is it going to be a horror story, a romance, a comedy, etc. After that, you organize everything, think about what should go where, what comes first, etc. And in the end, you connect everything by adding details of your choice that are suitable for your story.
Rainsford fell off of the boat and is now on Ship-Trap Island
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Disney supporters successfully influenced Congress through lobbying.
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Few books in U.S. history have been as influential--or as controversial--as "Huckleberry Finn," which traces the rafting voyage of a white boy and the black, runaway slave he befriends. Few novels have been as widely debated or as frequently banned. The book got some new, and this time welcome, attention this week, thanks to a PBS series by documentary filmmaker Ken Burns that looked at the life of Mark Twain. "Huckleberry Finn" not only has survived the efforts to bury it, it has thrived and it has grown as a teaching tool. Innovative high school teachers now use it to talk to students about the imperfect America that forged Twain. They draw the connections between that America and the nation's lingering problems of racism.
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