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Science Fiction & Fantasy author

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Writing prompt

Tuesday prompt: #11 2013

March 12, 2013 by L. Darby Gibbs

Responding to the call to adventure

Write a few paragraphs using the opening steps of the heroic journey by introducing a character capable of heroic actions, though she or he may not feel capable of such things.  Supply a problem or other motivating situation for the character to accept a call to adventure.  The common enough character feels a need, desire or push to proceed on a journey that under normal circumstance would not be considered the norm among choices of action.  That is it.  If you need more detailed information follow this link to my explanation of the Heroic Journey narrative mode.

Filed Under: Tuesday prompts Tagged With: creative writing, hero, heroic journey, Tools for writing, Writing, writing practice, Writing prompt

Tuesday prompt: #10 2013

March 5, 2013 by L. Darby Gibbs

This is an exercise for plotting.  Below is a plot that contains a major flaw: the main character has no challenge to reaching her goal.  Replot the events so that the character still gets to the goal, but she doesn’t have an easy time of it.

  • Susie eats at the same diner each day without fail, ordering eggs, bacon, and hash browns.  Though she does not know the cook’s name, he always nods at her when he sees her head for a her favorite booth in the corner.  A short time later, her breakfast arrives.
  • Sam enters and takes the booth beside her own.  She sits looking in his direction over the two seat backs, he hers.
  • Each time she looks up, she finds herself looking into his eyes.  He smiles every time.
  • She hasn’t any ketchup at her table and asks him if he could pass her his.  He walks it over to her and waits for her to finish before returning to his own seat.
  • She eats every bite, pleased she didn’t have to do so without the ketchup.

(And you thought this was all about Susie and Sam.)

Now the goal is the ketchup.  Time to alter the plot so that she still gets the ketchup but the process is not easy.

Filed Under: Tuesday prompts Tagged With: adding conflict, creative writing, plots, plotting, redraft, Tools for writing, Writing, writing practice, Writing prompt

Tuesday prompt: #9 2013

February 26, 2013 by L. Darby Gibbs

Regional stories are wrapped around the cultural, traditional, and environmental qualities of the area.  Often dialect is a feature, but not a requirement.  So work on a few paragraphs of a story that can only happen where you are.  Make it utterly dependent on the locale, can’t happen anywhere else but there.

Read Faulkner’s “Barn Burning” or Wolfe’s “Only the Dead Know Brooklyn” for example.

Filed Under: Tuesday prompts Tagged With: description, Dialogue, locale, regional, regionalism, Writing, writing ideas, writing practice, Writing prompt

Tuesday prompt: #8 2013

February 19, 2013 by L. Darby Gibbs

Pick out a room in your house or apartment that you would love to remodel.  Imagine the changes you would make.  What different furniture would you prefer, paint scheme, layout, window type?  Think about every detail: baseboard, electrical switches, trim around the doors, what is in the vase of flowers, scent. 

capture the details

When you have the vision clear in your mind, start writing it down.  Be as clear as you can with what the room looks like now and then blast away at it, always maintaining a steady sense of the place.  If necessary, keep your vantage point from one place in the room, i.e., the entrance from the front hall or a corner where most of the room is viewable, even a glimpse of other rooms to add contrast.  Most importantly, don’t let your reader get lost in the room. 

This could take a bit of time and writing. When you have it all, go back through and remove everything that is unnecessary to maintaining the overall look. Keep trimming until you have it down to a page of overall change, with enough close detail to set the effect of the room as down to the tiniest point, and enough general description that the room is not centered on details.  Sort of like matching your earrings or cufflinks to the dress or suit you are wearing. No piece sets the tone alone, it all works together.

Filed Under: Tuesday prompts Tagged With: creative writing, Editing, imagery, redecorate, remodel, sensory details, setting, stretching your imagination, trimming for content, view point, Writing, writing practice, Writing prompt

Tuesday prompt: #7 2013

February 12, 2013 by L. Darby Gibbs

Probably everybody has the sleeping dream of flying, usually without wings, airplane or other standard materials.  I know I once flew in a chair.  If I raised my legs straight out in front of me I went up, bending down them sent me to the ground.  I have flown in a car up and down incredible vertical runs. 

Your prompt, if you choose to accept it, is write your character into a flying experience.  Don’t worry about using conventional means to enable flight, just get them into the air somehow with at least some means of control, however rocky it might be.

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

Tuesday prompt: #6 2013

February 5, 2013 by L. Darby Gibbs

banana peals – sweet, heavy vapor with bitter undertones.

Work on sensory details by focusing on the sense of smell.

Write about something that smells really bad, corrupt, nauseating even.

Filed Under: Tuesday prompts Tagged With: creative writing, description, sensory details, Tools for writing, Writing, writing practice, Writing prompt

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