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Science Fiction & Fantasy author

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creative writing

Tuesday prompt: #4 2013

January 22, 2013 by L. Darby Gibbs

MASK, mask

Often people have a persona that covers their true self.  Take that idea of a mask and apply it to a character.  Design them with a strong personality, but beneath it have a second sense of self that is kept hidden. As you design these two sides (interior true self and exterior mask), try to have a few aspects cross between the two.  Both prefer to listen rather than speak first or both like the color blue.  The interior escapes from inside when it fits the exterior persona.

So the tough guy that throws knives so well is crazy about practicing darts before bed.

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

Tuesday prompt: #3 2013

January 15, 2013 by L. Darby Gibbs

Start with something enormous and begin describing by taking your description from the general to the specific, the large to the tiny.  For example, from a mountain to the bobbing wild flower gone to seed.

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

When I have trouble getting the words out

January 9, 2013 by L. Darby Gibbs

What some might call a mild form of the infamous writer’s block.  I have never suffered from the extreme form.  I do have times when a scene I have in mind isn’t working, but I don’t call that writer’s block.  It is more a case of not having worked out the details or I am expecting something from my character that really isn’t what he or she would do, or maybe not how that character would do it.

On Goodreads recently a writer was looking for advice on how to overcome her writer’s block.  I made some suggestions but they were based on my practices to improve my effort when I felt I was failing to produce something worthwhile.  It has never been a case of not being able to put words on the page, which does sound awful, something I do not want to face.

So these are the things I do when my writing is not up to snuff.

  • I go read someone I think is a great writer and hope his or her ability will rub off or inspire my own (my writer’s muse frequently is named Heinlein.  I can’t tell you how many times I have read Door into Summer).
  • I lay my self down on the couch, close my eyes and imagine my character in the scene I am working on.  I put in all the details: lighting, decor, emotion, what happened just before, what is going to happen after.  Soon there will be dialogue of either the character talking to me or to some other character. At some point, I find something I simply must start writing, and I am off the couch.
  • Sometimes, convinced I am just tired, I will go to lie down and that will last all of two minutes.  Counter to my intentions, I suddenly have plenty to write.
  • I tell my self to just write anything, summarize what I wanted to cover, write a scene that is needed, dredge up an old hurt my character has, anything, good or bad.  At some point I am warmed up enough that I have something to write worth writing.  I never expect perfection.  I always tell myself, “Hey, you are going to redraft it anyway.”
  • When there are times that I cannot write, but I really want to, I record it on the memo app on my phone. Then when I am actually able to write and can’t think of the wording, I listen to the recording which always has some key line that I can leap off of, and then I write. 
  • A writer once told me (YA and children’s novelist Joan Oppenheimer) never leave your writing finished. Always leave yourself at a point where you know where the plot is going next or what the next issue is, whatever. Make a quick note to yourself about what is next.  Then when I come back, there is my reminder. I don’t have to stare at a blank sheet, something is already waiting for me.
  • I review the scenes I know are coming up and see if one seems ready to be written now.  I’ll write it and later fill in the missing space that I was having trouble with.  I have the start and now the end point, so filling in the middle won’t be so difficult.

Filed Under: Writing Meditations Tagged With: advice, creative writing, process, redraft, Tools for writing, writer's block, Writing

Tuesday prompt: #2 2013

January 8, 2013 by L. Darby Gibbs

Today imagine yourself or a character doing a common activity, i.e., washing dishes.  In the process of this activity, have a mythological creature appear.  How would your character or you react to such an event? Write about it.

Spirit of the cave

For example: Let’s say you choose dish washing.  Imagine as the water was flowing out of the tap, you (or your character) realized the water was looking just like a foot disappearing down the drain as if a water spirit had flowed out of the tap.  What would happen?  Would you turn the water off or reach for the disposal switch?  Would you back away or grab for the foot.  Write out the scene and find out.

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

Tuesday Prompt: #1 2013

January 1, 2013 by L. Darby Gibbs

Happy New Year prompt:
Write about what you are hoping for in this new year, what a new year might bring to a character’s story that you are working on or work on a poem about bringing in a new year.  Speculate as far as you can go.

Just like this kaleidoscope picture, imagine turning the view on the new year and seeing what a small shift in perception or action might bring.

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

Tuesday prompt: #53 2012

December 25, 2012 by L. Darby Gibbs

Write about a Christmas moment.  Keep it tightly focused:  green and red sparks twinkle on a round blue ornament, drizzled in gold glitter.  On the lower half of the roundness, where less of the glitter crusted, reflect the curved images of two children in red pajamas pulling aside bright wrapping paper.  The background soft chimes of Christmas music take back stage to the delighted “thank you’s” as some are shouted out in inattentive abandon while others are whispered in glorious wonder.

Or write about a birthday, if you are commercial Christmassed out.

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

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