Today we’re back to writing short story forms, after our week of working on support for the novelists among us.
The Prompt: https://storyaday.org/20170523-list/
Today we’re back to writing short story forms, after our week of working on support for the novelists among us.
The Prompt: https://storyaday.org/20170523-list/
I love this kind of thing. It’s one of the reasons I keep coming back to short stories: this ability to tell a story in the most unexpected of ways.
This week I read a story by Jennifer Egan that looks like a ‘to do’ list. It’s not. Well, not entirely.
13. Renew meds
14. Investigate poisons
a. Flammable
b. Powders
c. Gasses
d. Pills
e. Herbal
f. Chemical
g. Musical
1. Ask kids
With almost every new item on the list, the reader gets closer to figuring out what is going on.
It’s not just a puzzle though. There’s humor too: that “Renew meds….investigate poisons”! I can almost hear the “Oh, that reminds me…”, which is the way I make “to do” lists (usually without such murderous intent).
This was fun, and reminded me that Jennifer Egan’s most famous novel A Visit From The Goon Squad is, not only a collection of related stories, it contains a section that is a Powerpoint presentation!
Don’t let anyone tell you what you can write, when you’re writing a short story!
Write a story in the form of a list
Go!
Today we tell a story focusing on the setting (and your five senses)
The Prompt: https://storyaday.org/20170522-setting
Today I encourage you to make your prose as purple as you like, in a quest to find out how much description you really need.
Write a story (set in your novel’s world) that makes sensation a priority. Use all five senses.
Don’t forget to leave a comment or do your Victory Dance!
Today we look at less tangible aspects of the world you’re building, and what makes them the way they are.
The prompt: https://storyaday.org/20170521-society
Today we look at a less tangible aspect of world-building: What makes your society the way it is?
Write a story focusing on an aspect of society that matters to you/your story. How did society get to a place where this is important?
Don’t forget to leave a comment or do your Victory Dance!
Continuing our week of short story writing, for novelists, today we look at what aspects of your world might need better examined.
The Prompt: https://storyaday.org/20170520-concrete
Today I invite you to do some world-building, either for a novel in progress or for a story world you’d like to spend more time in, focusing on concrete aspects of the world.
Write a story that focuses on the discovery/invention/ramifications of something that shapes your characters’ physical world.
Don’t forget to leave a comment or do your Victory Dance!
Today we step back into the past, to when your protagonist met an important supporting character
The prompt: https://storyaday.org/20170519-secondary
Today’s writing prompt invites you to look back into your characters’ past again.
Imagine the first (significant) meeting between your protagonist and a secondary character
Don’t forget to leave a comment letting us know how you got on, or come on in to the community and do your Victory Dance!
Today we ask: what if the protagonist simply isn’t up to the job…
The Prompt: https://storyaday.org/20170518-no
Continuing our week of prompts aimed at creating rich backstory for novelists and short story writers alike, today we create an alternate story for your protagonist.
There is a moment in every story where a protagonist has to make a choice: to take up the challenge of the story or to turn away. Everything else flows from that.
Today, write a story in which your protagonist makes the other choice.
Don’t forget to leave a comment, or do your Victory Dance in the community.
Today we continue diving deeply into your protagonist’s past with a story that takes place just before the story you really want to tell; or with a series of journal entries from the same time period.
The Prompt: https://storyaday.org/20170517-journal
Continuing our series of prompts to help novelists as well as short story writers, today I encourage you to move forward a little in your protagonist’s timeline, but still stay before the main story.
Write a story about the days leading up to the beginning of your novel, or your story’s big incident. Alternatively, write a journal of those days from your protagonist’s point of view.
Don’t forget to leave a comment to let us know how you got on.
Today kicks off a week of prompts that are aimed at helping novelists spend part of this month deepening their understanding of a work in progress or a work-to-be. Of course, the prompts can all be used by short story writers too!
Today’s prompt encourages you to delve into the past of a protagonist in one of your stories (or novels) and unearth what makes them the way they are…
The Prompt: https://storyaday.org/20170516-turning-point
This week I’m focusing on prompts that novelists can use. If you’re novelist, I don’t want you to feel like you’re wasting your time here at StoryADay May. While short story writers can easily use these prompts, too, you novelists will find much in them that enriches your work-in-progress.
Let’s dive in:
The Prompt
Write a story that investigates a turning point in your protagonist’s past.
Tips
Lisa Cron’s Story Genius (referenced in the video) can be found here or requested through your local indie bookstore.
Today’s writing prompt encourages you to take a second look at an earlier story.
The prompt: https://storyaday.org/20170515-second-look/
Today I encourage you to take a second look at a story you’ve written before.
Take a story you’ve written before and write it again from a different point of view.
You can rewrite the events of the story, as viewed by someone else.
You could choose to use the original story as a jumping-off point, that simply informs your knowledge of this formerly-secondary character.
Feel free to write the story in a completely different form (if the first one was a series of letters, you could write this one in a more narrative form.
Today’s prompt comes from another wonderful writer from my local network.
I had a nightmare last night. I woke up and started writing….
Maria Hazen Lewis writes women’s fiction in Pennsylvania.
Today’s prompt encourages you to think like a writer.
The Prompt: https://storyaday.org/20170514-maria
In today’s prompt, writer Tony Conaway invites you to write about a misapprehension.
The Prompt: https://storyaday.org/20170513-tony
More about Tony: http://wayneaconaway.blogspot.com/
Today’s prompt is about the (sometimes comedic) art of misapprehension.
Today’s prompt focuses on misapprehension – that is, interpreting something incorrectly. Too often, in fiction, every character communicates perfectly. That’s not the way it happens in real life.
Example: award-winning author Harlan Ellison once misheard a conversation at a party. He overheard a woman say, “”Jeffy is fine. He’s always fine.”” What Ellison actually heard was “”He’s always FIVE.”” That inspired the story “”Jefty Is Five,”” about a boy who never grows up.
Alternately, the misapprehension could be visual. True story: when I graduated college, I moved to a southern town – one of those places where anti-intellectualism seemed to be the prevailing attitude. I met lots of girls there, but I was looking for an intellectual girlfriend. One day, while sitting in dingy waiting room, I saw a pretty girl outside. To my amazement, she wore a tee-shirt with the letters “”SPQR”” on it. SPQR stood for – in Latin – “”The Senate and the People of Rome.”” What kind of woman wore a tee-shirt that referenced Ancient Rome? I had to meet her! I rushed outside, saw the girl…and discovered that her shirt didn’t say “”SPQR.”” It said “”SPORT.”” Stretched around her well-endowed chest, the final letter was hadn’t been visible from where I sat. (I was so disappointed, I didn’t even speak to her.)
So that’s your prompt: misapprehension, either verbal or visual.
Born in Philadelphia, PA, Tony Conaway has written and ghostwritten everything from blogs to books. He has cowritten non-fiction books published by McGraw-Hill, Macmillan and Prentice Hall. His fiction has been published in eight anthologies and numerous publications, including Blue Lake Review, Danse Macabre, Rind Literary Magazine, qarrtsiluni, The Rusty Nail and Typehouse Literary Magazine.
His odder work includes co-writing the script for a planetarium production, and jokes performed by Jay Leno on The Tonight Show. He blogs at http://wayneaconaway.blogspot.com/ He was recently a guest on the Indy Writer Podcast, talking about writing short fiction.
Today’s prompt is all about poetry. Or theft. Or possibly both…
The Prompt: https://storyaday.org/20170512-elise/
More about Elise: 2 Elizabeths
Poetic Inspiration: Let a Favorite Poem Breathe Life into Your Short Story
Reading poetry is a great way to inject beauty and inspiration into our daily lives. Select a poem that resonates with you, and let it inspire you as you write your next short story!
In order to provide a specific prompt, I suggest Shakespeare’s Sonnet 25, which showcases a theme of the power of love. Beneath the poem, you will find suggestions for other poets (both classic and contemporary), as well as specific ideas for incorporating poetic tools such as theme, imagery and rhythm into your prose.
“Let those who are in favour with their stars
Of public honour and proud titles boast,
Whilst I, whom fortune of such triumph bars,
Unlookt for joy in that I honour most.
Great princes’ favourites their fair leaves spread
But as the marigold at the sun’s eye;
And in themselves their pride lies buried,
For at a frown they in their glorie die.
The painful warrior famoused for fight,
After a thousand victories once foil’d,
Is from the book of honour razed quite,
And all the rest forgot for which he toil’d:
Then happy I, that love and am beloved
Where I may not remove nor be removed.”
– William Shakespeare
Sonnet 25
There is a vast array in styles of poetry, and not every single poem will resonate with you. With a little persistence, you will find the unique voices and poignant words to inspire your prose and warm your soul.
Elise Holland is co-founder and editor of 2 Elizabeths, a short fiction and poetry publication. Her work has appeared in various publications, most recently in Darling. Through 2 Elizabeths, Elise strives to create value and visibility for writers, through writing contests, events, and more!
In today’s prompt Bea from The Busy Muse encourages us to take a second look at our first idea.
The Prompt: https://storyaday.org/20170516-bea/
Bea’s site: The Busy Muse
Today, Bea from The Busy Muse gives us a scenario and encourages us to stretch our genre expectations…
Don’t forget, you can listen to the audio-only by subscribing to the podcast
Your company sends you to meet a costumer at their house. It’s a standard, nice neighborhood.
You ring and ring but nobody answers. The door is ajar, and you enter, calling aloud.
All is in order in the living room apart from an overturned potted plant on the expensive-looking rug…
Bea is a bilingual writer and freelancer currently living near Venice, in Italy. She blogs and helps writers with their writing and creativity at . The Busy Muse. She brainstorms new ideas with her cat, who is very good at listening but not at providing solutions.
Today’s writing prompt involves a chance encounter.
The Prompt: https://storyaday.org/20170510-sarah
Sarah’s Books: http://amzn.to/2pir5nN
Another new episode of Write Every Day, Not “Some Day”
Today’s prompt, from author Sarah Cain, features a chance encounter. This is going to be fun!
Podcast version:
The chance encounter. Have you ever run into someone you know when you look grubby? Or maybe you see an old boyfriend at Starbucks. Or perhaps, as in Alfred Hitchcock’s famous Stranger’s On a Train, you run into a stranger who offers to do you a service, like murder, in return for you returning the favor. Think of a chance encounter that could leave you shaken, stirred, or in deep trouble.
Sarah Cain is the author of the Danny Ryan political thrillers, The 8th Circle and One By One. She lives in the Philadelphia suburbs with her husband Howard, a former political consultant, and her two insane cats, and spends a great deal of time contemplating murder. In her spare time, she reads, plays Cards for Humanity, and dreams about moving to Ireland.
Today’s prompt from Charlotte Rains Dixon is very, very silly. And sometimes that is exactly what we need…
The Prompt: https://storyaday.org/20170509-charlotte
Charlotte’s page: http://www.wordstrumpet.com/
Today, Charlotte Rains Dixon indulges in some whimsy, and I can’t wait to see what you come up with for this!
Write a story about what happens when a nun in a wimple, a man in cowboy hat and boots, and a bartender with a handlebar moustache wearing a red and white polka-dot bow tie meet in a tavern on a rainy night.
Charlotte Rains Dixon mentors creative writers from passionate to published. Charlotte is a free-lance journalist, ghostwriter, and author.
She is Director Emeritus and a current mentor at the Writer’s Loft, a certificate-writing program at Middle Tennessee State University. She earned her MFA in creative writing from Spalding University and is the author of a dozen books, including The Complete Guide to Writing Successful Fundraising Letters, and Beautiful America’s Oregon Coast. Her fiction has appeared in The Trunk, Santa Fe Writer’s Project, Nameless Grace, and Somerset Studios and her articles have been published in Vogue Knitting, the Oregonian, and Pology, to name a few. Her novel, Emma Jean’s Bad Behavior, was published in 2013, and she is represented by Erin Niumata at Folio Literary.
Her prompt book, Just Prompt Me, was released in 2016, and is the first in a series.
Learn about her annual writing workshops in Europe at letsgowrite.com, and visit her blog at www.charlotterainsdixon.com, where you can find all kinds of tips and techniques on writing and creativity.