Saturday, December 19, 2009

Writing Inspiration -- Situation: Snow Storm

We're hunkering down here for a very long snowstorm.  It's supposed to snow for the next 24 hours.  Last night the supermarket was crazy, everyone stocking up for a few days holed up in the house.  I was one of those people, stocking up on chips and salsa, cheese and crackers, oatmeal and honey, wine.  We've got stacks of DVDs and movies.


Come up in your head with a few characters who face a day of being stuck at home.  What's their relationship with each other?  Did they play properly like I did?  Are they happy about being unable to get out, or are they stressed out?  How about with being stuck with each other?


Write about what they did before the big snow-in, how they planned (or didn't).
Then write about the start of the snow... when did it?  Did they wake up to it?  Did they think for a while it wasn't actually going to happen, then it did?
And finally, write out what happens during the snow-in.  How do they pass the time?  Is there gonna be a big fight?  Or maybe romance blooms?
Have fun with it.

Sunday, December 13, 2009

Using a Cliche

There are a lot of cliches in writing, but sometimes they can get you inspired to start writing.  Sometimes what we think of as an over-used concept got that way because it's an easy springboard to getting a story started.  If it gets a character or course of action started in your head, then maybe it's worth it.  Once the arc of a story gets started in your head, you can always take the cliche out of it later.  But even if that doesn't work, at least it's a fun writing exercise.


A man or woman lying on his or her deathbed, looks back at a single episode in life.  Who is this person?  Where are they, at home, hospital, nursing home?  What did he do for a living?  Does she have a family?  What is the single episode this person is looking back at, a good memory or a bad?  Is it a decision he made or one not made?  Is it the greatest moment in her life, or is it a regret?  Is he remembering the way it was or coming to a new realization?


Write one up.  If you like it and want to share, send it to me.  If it's really good, and you agree to allow me, I'll post it here to inspire other writers.

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Constrained Writing Exercise #4

OK, I promised a harder exercise a few back.  Then I suggested a writing exercise of a short-short story of exactly 100 words.


Ready to drive yourself a little crazy?  Now write a short-short story of exactly 100 words... and... don't use the same word twice.  Yes, that's right!  100 unique words.


Now, the results will get a little poetic sounding, because you can't use the same word twice, and that includes pronouns, the's, prepositions, my, your, his, her... it's tough referring to the same person several times, or doing on in first person only being able to use on I, my, me...


After you finish, an easy way to double check yourself to make sure you didn't duplicate a word... enter your entire 100 word story in a spreadsheet in one column, one word per cell.  When you finish, sort it alphabetically.   A quick survey down the column will show you any duplicates.


Try it.  It's fun to think about different words to use.  It'll get you out of your comfort vocabulary.  If you love your result, share it with me at SMHIOF@aol.com.

Monday, December 7, 2009

You're Telling a Story...

There are a lot of different forms of writing.  They each have their own rules of length, narrative, and style. Try writing in lots of them.  There's a big difference between writing a prose short story and writing a non-fiction feature article for a magazine.  There's even a big difference between writing a news story for a newspaper and a feature in the very same periodical.  Have you ever noticed how you get the entire story in the first sentence of a front page news story, then the further along you read the more of the details are revealed?  'Three men were found dead in a parked car last night in a church parking lot of New Street."  In fiction writing you would rarely divulge like that.  But for a newspaper article, it's a must, 'Don't bury the lead.'


Read a bunch of news stories, listen to television news broadcasts.  Try writing a fake news story about something serious happening locally.  Make up the details, but stay true to the way a news story is laid out.


Even if you're goal is writing fiction, it's a great exercise in narrative flow.

Thursday, December 3, 2009

Constrained Writing Exercise #3

Here's another quick little writing exercise.  It'll drive you a little nuts with word choice.  Write a sentence or two as long as you can with each word starting with a subsequent letter of the alphabet, starting of course with A.


I wrote this one, got as far as W.  Okay, okay, X is really tough...


A billowing canopy, draped elegantly for graduation hung in June; Kate looked mesmerized, nervously opened papers, quickly realizing she's the university valedictorian!  "What!?!"

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Writing Inspiration -- Local News

In my local newspaper, they post the police blotter that lists all the crimes that took place in town that week.  It's a fantastic place to find inspiration for writing stories!


Read your local police blotter, and you'll find stories like 'Someone smashed a window on a Honda Civic parked on State Street, some time during the evening on Wednesday between the hours of 8pm and 11pm. Nothing was stolen from the vehicle.'  Think about it.  Whose car is it?  Why was it parked on State Street?  Did the person live there?  Were they visiting someone?  Who broke the window?  They didn't take anything, so that leads you to the important question: Why did they break the window?


Write a short little story about someone involved in the story, either directly or indirectly.  The owner of the car.  The person who lives on State Street, if it's someone else.  The person who broke the window.  The police officer who responded to the call.  A State Street neighbor.  A spouse or family member of one of these poeple.

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Holiday Writing

Holidays are a great setting for writing.  Whether it's a crazy family drama; a revelation; or a charming sweet story of reunion or gathering, the holidays are a time when we act differently from our everyday routines.  And of course it's the non-routine occurrences in life that make for the best stories.  The unusual, unexpected, improbable.


Thanksgiving is a great start for a short story.  It's all about sitting down to a meal.  One dinner, one day.  Write down what you're doing for this Thanksgiving.  Before it starts or before it gets too far along, write down as a quick list who you're spending it with, what their relationships are to each other, what you'll be eating, where you'll be spending it.  Now how about writing down who isn't there, who you might have expected but aren't coming, and what they're doing instead.  Write down your quick expectation of how dinner will go.


Now write a story about how it didn't go, how it could have been very different.  Was there a topic that was avoided?  Was there a fight that could have broke out?  Or you know, maybe one did.


Remember it's one meal, one day, one get-together.  So keep it to a short story length.  See how it goes.


Happy Turkey.

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Constrained Writing Exercise #2

On my last blog, we did a very successful writing exercise of short-short-SHORT stories.  Here's the first part.  We'll keep it EASY this time around.  But beware something more in-depth will follow later.


For now, if you've tried writing a short-short story, less than 1,000 words, try this ultra-short... write a short-short story that is exactly 100 words long.  It's a super short form, but you should be able to tell a simple narrative story.  It's great for a quick conversation with a conflict and a resolution.  Think about the scene.  Is it a story that takes place at one stop light, one elevator ride, one phone call?


Try it.  If you enjoy it and want to share your results, email your story to me at SMHIOF@aol.com, and if I love it, I'll post it here for other readers to comment on.

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Constrained Writing Exercise #1

One of my favorite forms of writing play is constrained writing.  One of the most famous is writing without using the letter E.  There's actually a famous novel written entirely under that constraint, originally published in French, which uses even more E's, then translated, if you can believe that, into English.  Astounding.


Anyway, there are many forms of constrained writing exercise.  Basically, take any random rule and write under its limitations.  It forces unique word choice, sentence structure, form, use of poetic rewording.  Here's a quick exercise for you.  Write a complete entire sentence in which every word starts with the same letter.  This is a great one for teaching you not to rely on prepositions, the's, pronouns, and well, it just makes you think about picking just-the-right word.  Here's one I did...


Aphrodite arched and aimed an arrow at an amorously anguished Amazon.


Now it's your turn.

Short-Short Stories -- A Great Form

Inspiration can come from anywhere.  An important part of being a writer is to constantly get yourself writing.  That's why short little exercises are important.  The greatest musician practices scales and chords.  The best singer still warms up.  You never know when the smallest little writing exercise will inspire you to write something more significant.


That's why I love short short stories.  Write a complete story arc in two or three pages.  That's less than 1,000 words.  Entire classes are taught using just the short-short as a writing exercise.  It's a perfect form if you have a writing group or writing partners, because you can come together weekly or monthly and have a piece that can be read and discussed completely at each meeting.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

Inspire Create Write

Welcome to my new site, dedicated to the art of writing. My own, of course. But this is also intended to be a place where writers can join in, create, find inspiration, and connect to others who are scribblers, writers, authors.