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Inkabout L. Darby Gibbs

Science Fiction & Fantasy author

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  • Annals of the Dragon Dreamer
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Tuesday prompts

Tuesday prompt: #36 2012

September 4, 2012 by L. Darby Gibbs

Pick a co-worker you don’t know well but have observed.  (You can exchange co-worker with club member or any large group you are involved with.) Describe that individual.  As you do, you will find the main feature about that person that stands out to you because you will focus in on it without realizing it.  This practice (maybe do two or three) is useful because you will be describing real people who have qualities that you have unconsciously connected with.  Collecting idiosyncrasies from real individuals you know and using them in your writing will add a naturalness to your characters and help your readers to identify them individually, especially when there is a large cast. 

Writers select only a few qualities to attach to a character, main or minor.  Hair and eyes are popular features, but there are so many other qualities that can help define a character as unique and help a reader connect with that individual no matter how short the involvement with the individual is in the reading.

Examples:

  • Glasses that slide down the nose or enlarge the eyes when lenses are looked through directly by other characters.
  • Profuse sweating:  sweaty hands, beading above the lip.
  • Feet that slap the floor with every step.
  • A habit of rubbing an ear or stroking a brow.

Filed Under: Tuesday prompts Tagged With: creative writing, description, redraft, Tools for writing, Writing, Writing prompt

Tuesday prompt: #35 2012

August 28, 2012 by L. Darby Gibbs

face on the wall

Find a face in your house that does not belong to a living being (no animals, no people).  Imagine it speaking and telling you its favorite moment. Give the voice emotion, specific diction and a degree of movement or expression.  Write the length of a page or two.

Filed Under: Tuesday prompts Tagged With: creative writing, description, Teaching, Tools for writing, Writing, Writing prompt

Tuesday prompt: #34 2012

August 21, 2012 by L. Darby Gibbs

This prompt requires you apply your imagination to something that already exits.  I have one example that will be looked at two different ways.  Recently a tree branch fell from one of the large city trees planted on the other side of our sidewalk.  From one angle it looked to me like a big spider and from another angle it reminded me of the flying predators (Ikran) from the movie Avatar.

Avatar Ikran

Big, ugly spider

So find an object that could be viewed as something else and write about it wandering the neighborhood, city, countryside or where ever. 

Filed Under: Tuesday prompts Tagged With: creative writing, process, Tools for writing, Writing, Writing prompt

Tuesday prompt: #33 2012

August 14, 2012 by L. Darby Gibbs

Today you’ll practice settings. Choose two opposing settings, such as a beach and mountainous area.  Think of a specific place and don’t pick the obvious time of year. Winter on the Atlantic Seaboard leaves the beach looking far different than summer.  The waves on a particularly chilly day can actually become frozen mid-crest coming in to shore. It looks like an ice sculpture all along the beach edge thawing out as the ocean keeps rolling in, but the frozen crust of a frigid crest remains in place.  The sand crunches like broken glass, and the salt air stings your face.  As for mountains, the Cuyamaca Mountains in California are far different from the Blue Mountains of western Oregon which have a tint of blue gray vagueness and a sense of just being dropped in place without warning or preamble of foothills.  Pick a specific setting, detail it out and then switch to the other.  Flex your descriptive muscles as you change between your chosen dramatic scenes.

Filed Under: Tuesday prompts Tagged With: creative writing, description, Teaching, Tools for writing, Writing, Writing prompt

Tuesday prompt: #32 2012

August 7, 2012 by L. Darby Gibbs

Design something that does not exist.  Here are some items to choose from.

  • a creature
  • a tool that can be used for painting
  • material for use as road surface
  • compact nutrient replacement food or drink
  • a better mouse trap (or moose trap)
  • transportation
  • a political faction
  • pet
  • truth serum/detector
  • medical treatment

Once you have selected what you are going to create, describe it being used as a routine item or concern in a character’s life.

Filed Under: Tuesday prompts Tagged With: creative writing, Teaching, Writing, Writing prompt

Tuesday prompt: #31 2012

July 31, 2012 by L. Darby Gibbs

You are standing on a corner and a car drives past.  What kind/color of car?  Is it going too fast or too slow?   What’s the destination?  Who is driving and what’s his/her story?

Filed Under: Tuesday prompts Tagged With: creative writing, Tools for writing, Writing prompt

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