Mini writing workshop: What should you write about?
Thank you for checking out the mini fiction writing workshop. In this series I share small, actionable tips for writing fiction. Whether you're a seasoned or developing writer, hopefully you will find some useful information.
This workshop session is about deciding what to write. Maybe you have a few ideas but don't know which ones have merit as stories. Or you sometimes have ideas, but you want a steadier flow of story ideas to choose from. Or perhaps you have story ideas all the time but you're not sure what to do with them.
Let's explore this!
Capturing those fireflies
Story ideas can come from anywhere and everywhere — including from dreams, memories, imagination, overheard conversations, and sudden inspiration that seems to come from nowhere when you're reading a book or watching a movie.
What you do with them is what matters. Consider these statistics:
- Any idea you don't write down right away is 75% less likely to be crafted into a story than one you do write down.
- 62% of ideas that come to you while you are working out or watching TV have the potential of becoming publishable stories.
- Two-thirds of the best sellers on the market started from a story idea written on a napkin.
Let's talk about some sources of inspiration.
Grabbing overheard conversations
Just think about the potential for storylines that might emerge from an overhead conversation in a coffee shop.
Man: He wouldn't take it. (Shakes his head sadly.)Now, it may turn out that the couple was merely discussing the challenging job of getting their child to take his medication. But what else might be going on?Woman: You did offer a bribe, right?
Man: Yes. Anything he wanted. No deal.
If you have a notebook or a laptop, you could start sketching out some ideas.
- What if the couple's neighbor knows about a crime they committed? What kind of crime? And why would the neighbor disclose that he knew their terrible secret but not go to the police? Is there something he wants from them, and he's just waiting for the right time to use his knowledge as leverage?
- Or, what if they wanted to deliver something anonymously and wanted a friend to be the delivery person? What might they have wanted delivered, and to whom? What was so important about keeping their identity secret?
Inspiration from reading
I'm not sure if this happens to everyone, but I instantly have story ideas rattling around in my head when I read. It's not that I want to write the same story I'm reading. In fact, the idea that pops into my head may not appear to have been inspired in any way by the story.Something else is at work. The creative thinking brain clicks on when we read, and it can inspire us to want to bring our own characters to life. I very often have to set a book down to write down the story ideas that came to mind so that I can clear the noise from my head and focus on the story I'm reading without distraction.
Writing teachers all say the same thing: to become a better writer, you must be a better reader. These two things are like inhaling and exhaling. You must breathe in to breathe out.
Turning memories and experiences into art
The things that happen in our lives can be happy memories, painful memories, things we are wistfully nostalgic about, or vague ideas that we are not even certain are real memories. Regardless, they are ripe for storytelling. There are multiple approaches you could take:
- Jot down as much as you remember from a life experience, making a note where a piece of the memory is vague or missing.
- Write memories as if they were fictional, putting a character into your shoes, and capturing how that person thinks and behaves.
- Write the story in narrative form: have a narrator tell your story and describe each detail to you as if you weren't there.
I've been running a workshop on Discord, and this was the exercise we did last week — to write a memory as if it was fiction, putting a character in your place. You can read the piece I turned out from the exercise here: Landscape in Motion.
Getting started when you don't know where to start
One of the most terrible things for a writer to do is to sit and look at a blank page or screen, hoping inspiration will come. I would rather take a hot poker in the eye. If you keep an idea notebook, you should never have to face a blank page. But if you do get stuck, try a short writing exercise just to get the words flowing.
For example:
- Think of a word or an image. It could be the word "tan" or the image of a woman dressed in red. Anything.
- Set a timer for five minutes and start writing. Don't stop writing until the timer goes off.
Once you have your five-minute writing piece in front of you, you've got something to work with. You can add onto it if you want something longer, or you can polish it as a micro-fiction piece. To make it complete, you will need to make sure your story has the key elements of a story — including character development, a conflict, a story arc, and a resolution. It may take a little time to edit into shape, or you may find it takes weeks or even months, if your fledgling piece is to become a longer form work such as a novella or novel.
Just don't stare at that blank page!
Join our weekly workshop
Want to work with writers and editors to improve your writing? Join me for a weekly fiction writing workshop at Steemhouse Community on Discord.
The writing workshop collection
You can browse my collection of writing workshop posts in the links below.
Mini workshop series
Short posts on specific writing topics:
- Mini writing workshop: How do you start a story? (How to determine the starting point)
- Mini writing workshop: What is magical realism? (Exploring the magical realism genre)
- Mini writing workshop: Should you write in present tense or past tense?
- Mini writing workshop: Must your character do that? (About writing tics and character pet peeves)
- Mini writing workshop: What's it all about? (About story lines)
- Mini writing workshop: Must we fight? (About conflict in fiction writing)
- Mini writing workshop: What's the point? (About making things happen)
- Mini writing workshop: What prompted that? (About writing from prompts)
- Mini writing workshop: Who said that? (Tips for writing dialog)
Mini workshops in 50-word prompt posts
Brief workshops, typically 3-5 paragraphs, at the top of 50-word short story challenge posts:- Mini writing workshop on "tense"
- Mini writing workshop on the editing process (with a walkthrough example)
- Mini writing workshop on taking time to write
- Mini writing workshop on the power of editing
- Mini writing workshop on critique
- Mini writing workshop on fixing punctuation errors
- Mini writing workshop on mainstream publishing (with a resource for 50-word story authors)
- Mini writing workshop on voice and language (as compared to the importance of plot)
- Mini writing workshop about becoming a great writer
- Mini writing workshop on contests and challenges
- Mini writing workshop on what makes a story a story
- Mini writing workshop on demystifying story writing
- Mini writing workshop on 50-word short story writing process
- Mini writing workshop on the steps for writing 50-word stories
- Mini writing workshop on micro-fiction and writing succinctly
- Mini writing workshop on the "why" of writing
- Mini writing workshop on the challenge of micro-fiction
In-depth workshop posts
The original writing workshop series:- Writing workshop volume 1: The beginning
- Writing workshop volume 2: Exploring voice in writing
- Writing workshop volume 3: Say what you want to say
- Writing workshop volume 4: Serial fiction projects on Steemit
- Writing workshop volume 5: Getting organized and actually writing
- Writing workshop volume 6: Tips for writing anywhere, anytime
- Writing workshop volume 7: Should you write historical fiction?
- Writing workshop volume 8: Prompts, contests and challenges - oh my!
- Writing workshop volume 9: Pushing through insecurity and writing anyway
- Writing workshop volume 10: Perspective and POV in fiction writing
- Writing workshop volume 11: Second person point of view in fiction
- Writing workshop volume 12: How to write your character's background
- Writing workshop volume 13: What to do with all these voices in my head?
- Writing workshop volume 14: Write your story from a logline
- Writing workshop volume 15: Three tips for improving your fiction
- Writing workshop volume 16: How to accept criticism on your fiction writing
Note: The image is sourced from Pixabay.
Posted from my blog with SteemPress : https://jaynalocke.com/2019/02/17/mini-writing-workshop-what-should-you-write-about/
Hello @jayna, thank you for sharing this creative work! We just stopped by to say that you've been upvoted by the @creativecrypto magazine. The Creative Crypto is all about art on the blockchain and learning from creatives like you. Looking forward to crossing paths again soon. Steem on!
Thank you, @creativecrypto!