Streaming Meemies

Stream of Consciousness Blog, Filled With The Fresh Cool Stream of Empty Thought. And if you believe that, then I have a covered bridge in Winnemucca, NV to sell you. ;-)

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Location: Bayport, New York, United States

Swain's world (The Cosmic Unicorn #1); A Day in the Life (Alternate Hilarities #3); The Lawnmower that Ate Manhattan (NIEKAS, I forget the issue); Spring Cleaning (Sound Waves); Shadow Play (The Parasitorium II: Parasitic Sands, 2007); Crow's Feat (Free Fall (February, 2007) Oh, and Obligatory Holly Lisle Affiliate Link for writing workshops and stuff.

28 November 2005

Doll and Avatar Makers

The Mini-Mizer
Gaia Dream Creator
Otaku Avatar Maker
South Park Character Generator
eLouai's Candy Bar Doll Maker
My Cartoon Dolls
Doll Island
Dollz Mania
http://games.franciscocharrua.com/doll-maker/

18 November 2005

Olio of Prompts VI

♥ Writing Prompt for Today

Though this word has a straightforward meaning (the obvious( there is also a secondary association unrelated to its meaning, just from its first syllable and the usage to which I have seen used by some folks. I leave it open for your interpretation.

Punditry.




♥ Today's writing prompt

I decided a one-word prompt might be nice for variety.

Today's prompt is


PEEWEE




♥ Prompt for Today: Shadows

Whether you're keeping a secret, walking at twilight or having A Dramatic Moment, shadows are a good springboard for writing. Lurking in the shadows waiting to pounce,. hiding in the shoadddws from a bully, the long shadows of early evening or the young shadows in the predawn light, keeping someone "in the dark"...




♥ Writing Prompt for Sunday 26 June 2005

I found inspiration for today's prompt from the subject field of a piece of spam. It's interesting how one phrase can evoke so many diverse random images.

PERMANENT GROWTH

I have no idea what product the spam referenced; the first thing that came to my mind was beard stubble. Some writers have described perpetual five o'clock shadow as a "permanent growth". It could be like The Rosie Greer movie, "The Thing With Two Heads" where the second attached head could be considered a "permanent growth" of sorts. A Google search for permanent growth turns up everything from land mass to hair loss treatments. There are even a few entries for Sunday School. There is, of course, also permanent growth repression as well.

There are still others that I think the Google search missed. Invent your own - it can be a piece of writing ranging from the spiritual to the surreal, the whimsical to the horrific.




♥ Writing Exercise - Fantasy

I borrowed this from Jands at the Topica Wolfrunner's list (which is dead, Jen, as it hasn't had a posting since September 1 of last year and the past few messages sem to be spammage). It seems like a decent enough writer's prompt.

In the dead of night, a cloaked figure leads two mounts into the courtyard to wait by the fountain. What's going on here?



♥ Today's Writing Prompt

"What's the bravest OR stupidest thing you (or your character) ever did?"
From the Daily Prompt
Generator




♥ Prompt for Thursday 23 June 2005: A Muse

Courtesy of the original Writing Fix prompt generator

"A muse inspires you to write. What natural object serves as a muse to you?
Write about someone seeing that object and being inspired to write."



♥ Today's Prompt

I took this straight from part one of today's Newsday, a Long Island
newspaper, because the headline soundedbiguous enough to generate some
very interesting responses:

Battle of the Burn.



♥ Today's Writing Prompt

The writing prompt for today is:

Opalescent storm

Today's prompt was adopted from Eyeblog's Creative Name
Generator
.



♥ for Sun 19, 2005 8:48

The writing prompt for today is:

In the cellar.



From Stichomancy on Facade.com:

What quote would work well for a closer on Writing Prompts List?

The excerpt represents the core issue or deciding factor on which you must meditate, and is drawn from The Sportsman by Xenophon:

Still up and down, old sinner, must we pace; 'Twill kill us both, this vain, long, wearing race (Kennedy).

[25] See Arrian, xx. 2.

But when they are really close to the hare they will make the matter plain to the huntsman by various signs--the quivering of their bodies backwards and forwards, sterns and all; the ardour meaning business; the rush and emulaton; the hurry-scurry to be first; the patient following-up of the whole pack; at one moment massed together, and at another separated; and once again the steady onward rush. At last they have reached the hare's form, and are in the act to spring upon her. But she on a sudden will start up and bring about her ears the barking




♥ Writing Prompt for 16 June 2005

I pulled this from today's Newsday. It was a caption for an astronomical photograph, a visual alignment of planet and moon:

DANCE WITH JUPITER.



♥ Writing Prompt for 16 2005

Ah, I forgot that I was gonig to look in the newspaper today for prompts. However, the paper has not arrived, so I give you this instead (while I still have use of the computer):

If the moon was made of bleu cheese, how would that affect the rest of the universe?



♥ Writing Prompt for Wednesday 15 June 2005: Dream Catcher

A monster, a cat, a plague o'both your houses!
It is to me that I fortune's pack saddle.

Jacinth.

In the nursery of piety the ghosts test,

aliensThe unusually subdued, Scottish librarian who skyrockets in golden spaceships, and claims to have been abducted by
.
"Think about all the birds you've seen--from songbirds to hunters. Compare
one or more people you know to different types of birds in a piece of
writingDaily Prompt Generator.

I included several prompts, this time out. I know that I have been notoriously bad at updating: but I also thought that if you wanted to combine one of the two, it it strikes a chord within you, then it would be A Very Good Thing. From the Shakespearean Insult Generator to the resident one on Writing Fix, this is a good sample of what's available.

I think that tomorrow, if Terror gives me the change (no more full days of school, you see) I'll try to post something from the newspaper. That is also a good resource for writing prompts and stories.



♥ Writing Prompt for Tue 14, 2005

CHARACTER:
=========

Describe a character without resorting simply to physical descriptions and ignoring personality and character history. (Courtesy of arkiewriter on lj).


♥ Combined Prompt for Monday the 13 (LOL): Women-hating extraterrestrials.

Combined Prompt for Monday the 13 (LOL): Women-hating extraterrestrials.

I hate women because they always know where things are.
James Thurber (1894 - 1961)

Your Character is a(n): alien
Your character's race is: goblins.
Your character's main character trait is their: kindness.
The characters weakness/downfall is/are: chicken soup.
The characters physical appearance is:
height: very tall.
body shape: pudgy.
hair: thick.
eyes: half closed.
scars: on back.

Distinguishing features: gap between two front teeth.
("Borrowed" from http://www.feath.com/idea/idea.htm - )


♥ Today's Writing Prompt

I feel like I'm cheating, but...

You know all the links listed on the intro page for this group? I added a link to Feath's Bookcase. There are writing prompts generators that Feath has on the site, which she's still working on. She moderates or is one of the moderators for musemuggers, a writing prompts challenge community on LiveJournal. Today's prompt is "adopted" from her site:

What power has law where only money rules.
Gaius Petronius (~66 AD)

I figured that, since I ran a bit short myself on ideas lately, that adopting one at least on occasion seems like an excellent notion. The prompt is from the Random Quotes Generator on her site.



♥ Writing Prompt for 08 June: Writer's Group "Notorious"

I received one of those e-newsletters from Writer's Digest and the prompt in it was looking over your old journal entries to inspire a new one. Unfortunately, that also inspired in me a twisted writing prompt.

Who are your three favorite fictional villains/antagonists? Let's say that they each started writing a book and they're looking for a writer's group but, not having found one willing to accept someone of their, er, dubious qualifications, decided to splinter off and form their own group. For example, let's say the three are Godzilla, Freddy Kruger and Chuckie. Trying to keep them as much in character as possible, try to imagine how their group's first meeting would run.



♥ A Cloud of Guilt Hangs over the Horizon

It's been a while since I posted a prompt. Sorry. I actually have two for you now. One is a twist on stereotypes and the other is - well...

1. Men are from Venus, Women are from Mars

Yes, I know it's usually the other way around (at least from the book's title), but not everything fits a nice, neat little label.

The other one's a twist of a well-worn phrase:

"It was a dark and stormy knight".



♥ Writing Prompt for Thu May 26, 2005

This time (since I have been so bad about posting prompts again) I chose today's from the Rider-Waite Tarot. It's a Major Arcana card, X, the Wheel of Fortune. This basically translates to random chance, a bit of unforeseen luck.

Of course, in fiction this "unforeseen luck" can be foreshadowed.

What you write is, of ocurse, your choice, be it poetry or prose, fact or fiction. If you journel then think of an example of random, lucky chance in your life, good or bad; if fiction, then it might well be a plot point. Poets, of course, frequently write about lucky chance so it can't hurt to add another to your folio.



♥ Wed May 25, 2005 12:17 pm prompt: The City

Cities are places of commerce. Lots of people, lots of individual trials and tribulations. In New York City folks pound the pavement looking for work, whether it's on Broadway or in the local pizza parlor.

There are many people in cities as well. Sometimes it's quiet, sometimes thre's a riot.

There's both good and bad, positive and negative, yin nd yang in a city. You can have opposing forces ready to clash or a heartwarming tale of a random act of kindness.



♥ today's Writing Prompt: Human Buttons

A piece of spam prodded this prompt. It's open to several different enterpretations. (Sorry SAM, but political tracts are not the purpose of this list, writing prompts are).

HUMAN BUTTONS.




♥ Today's Prompt: Desire


HA! Anotherbiguous prompt.

Some folks desire chocolate, others crave company. What is your character's desire? Or what comes to your mind when you think about desire?

Olio of Prompts V

  BLOCKED!
You have a situation in mind, but you can't figure out how to get it written?

Does it seem a bit sad and trite? Perhaps it would liven up if you put an element of chaos into what you're writing.

For what I'm writing for National Novel Writing Month, I added a cat to add a type of animal sidekick. This shows some of the characterization for my protagonist. I had the cat offer a rat it had caught for the stew. The protagonist took it in stride, of course--you can't really belong to a cat without knowing some of its eccentricities.

It turns out that I also added several plot points. The rats have turned into agents for my antagonist.

Try adding a random element into what you're writing--animal, mineral, or vegetable. It can add interest, help display character (showing versus telling) and might even enhance your plot.


♥ Writing Prompts Grab Bag

Tuesday:
♥ "Describe yourself through the eyes of someone (real or imagined) of the opposite sex who either loves you or hates you."
(from Cybernetic Engines Writing Prompt Generator
.

Wednesday:
♥ "How often did you wear it? Write about a piece of clothing that was important to you at some time in your life."
* Original WritingFix Prompt
Generator*

Thursday:
"Are there any family heirlooms in your possession? Tell about them and how you came to acquire them."
Imagination Prompt

Friday:
"A Found Poem is created from words or short phrases found in published pieces of writing. We've created an on-line example, using an article about Mark Twain from an encyclopedia. Click the three buttons to create a practice Found Poem on-line...then find your own articles and create Found Poems out of them. Click here to try."
Left-Brained Poetry Prompts

Saturday:
"My favorite childhood memory is..."
Write On! Prompt Generator

Sunday:
Story ideas: The First Words.
Your story starts with the words:
It wasn't a smile, so much as...
Feath's Bookcase .


♥ Writing Prompt for 24 October 2005: The Appointment

Write something about a doctor's appointment. Does anything interesting happen? Do they have to drag a patient in to an appointment, kicking and screaming?

Have fun!

And remember, only seven more days to Hallowe'en, and eight (well, seven and four hours) until the start of National Novel Writing Month


♥ Writer's Prompt for 23 October 2005

I'm borrowing a page from the LiveJournal community musemuggers archives, located
here at feath.com. I don't think that Feath will mind our borrowing it for a little while. There are generators on her site as well, for writing prompts and genreless stories, that folks are welcome to use.


♥ Writing Prompt: The Infamous Reluctant Spammer

How many pieces of spam have you received in your email over the past
week? I've received more then I care to think about: though this week
there seems to be a run on pharmaceuticals, rather than erection sets.

Your challenge, should you choose to accept it, is to write a
sympathetic story about a reluctant spammer who hates spam, but has
been driven into the industry for financial reasons. Perhaps a
cultured, refined, educated gentleman (or lady) who, on one hand, has
to resort to spamming in order to make a living; but on the other
hand, detests both spam and spammers.

The typographical errors--accident or intent--I leave to your literary purpose.


♥ From "The Prompts Collection"

This will be my second year with naNoWriMo (I managed to eke through 50,106 words last year) and http://www.livejournal.com/community/nanowarmup/ posted something for "More Character Dev" today:

List 15 simple pleasures. Pick one and write about it.

That's from the generator located at
http://prompts.diary-x.com/journal.cgi?entry=20051010cr and might be a good way to explore your main character(s).



♥ Inspired by the Fantasy Dares topic on the NaNoWriMo.org boards

The writing prompt for today is:

"You want fries with that?"

Relevant posting is above the Bozo Button dare.


♥ Writing Prompt: Panda Research

Yes, I received a piece of spam for a web research/opinion thing called "Panda Research". I had never heard of it before, but I did think that it was someone conducting research on pandas.

In the anime _Ranma 1/2_ there was a character (Ranma's grandfather) who turned into a panda each time he was splashed with cold water. A warm bath or water would of course return him to his normal form.

You could even have a researcher dressed in a panda suit, a la anime.

There are several ways that this could be interpreted. What does "Panda Research" mean to you, and can you build a vignette or a story around it?



♥ Writing Prompt (rising from my unovened sense of humor)

A dark and stormy knight...


♥ And the prompt for today is:

PERFECT MATCH.

I saw that for a piece of spam I screened and deleted from the writer's library. I think it was from a dating service, but I did not check to see if that was the case.

There are many different kinds of matches. One is, of course, with the dating services. Then there are marriage broekrs, another type of matchmaknig for those seeking the "perfect match". If you smoke then you sometimes use matches in place of lighters: and don't get me started on socks, my daughter seems to enjoy wearing pairs so mismatched that they give me a headache.

There are many more applications of this phrase as well. What does "a perfect match" mean to you?



♥ And the prompt for today is:

Write an encyclopedia/zoological entry for the species centaur. Be as
logical and honest as you can, adopting the perspective on a cantaur's
reality. How do they deal with stones in their hooves? How do you think they
sleep?


♥ Today's Prompt:

*perspicacious alacrity of **pulchritude*

--

♥ Crossed Realities

Write a scene or poem where an auto mechanic meets a wizard or witch.

The wizard or witch could be in for broomstick repair, only they end up in
the wrong shop. Te auto mechanic's car breaks down on the road. She or he
does not have the right tools on-hand to effect repairs (the car might be a
loaner, they might be on their way from one palce to another) and so has to
go into a repair shop run by a witch or a wizard.



♥ Non-Verbal Communications

Your prompt today is not only an exercise in characterization but also one in scene generation.

Write about two people having a discussion. One lies, the other is truthful;. What do you think their body language would read like?

You can use more people if you like, but those are the two major players.


♥ Writer's Prompt: I Am Going To Be Evil Today.

I Googled for erymology sites and I'll share the pain with you.

Etymology, you see, deals with word origins. So today's writing prompt is to look up the origins of a word and then write a story around it.

The word I used was "Caravan". I went to Etymology Online and looked it up. You don't have to use the word that I did, but there might be one that's been tasking you for a day or so. Look up the origins of the word. See what sparks from it.

I don't think you'll regret the results.


♥ Today's Prompt: In Vast Emptiness There Is Nothing Holy writers_libr...

I rejected a piece of spam from the library. I did spend a bit of time
looking for an online translator and ran across this free online
translator.
The simple Chinese had the most coherent translation . I edited it to try to
make a bit more English-friendly. Er, how do I know it was spam? Because
there was notation on English on it, saying that the mail was sent because
"U" (meaning the library) was a member of that list.

Well, the writer's library on Yahoo is not a member of the list. If the
person in charge of the spambot had done homework, they would have realized
that the message would not have showed up anyway since the library is set to
text only with no attachments permitted.

Still, the translated and transliterated message seemed as if it would make
for a good writer's prompt. There are several solid images in it. And so,
with little adieu, I present to you the Chiangnan village spam.

#

He knows the Chiangnan village; it's crisscrossing paths between fields. The
alleys bend in circles, the vertical ones difficult enough to recognize in
the daytime, much less in the dark night. He walks the narrow paths, several
times in the field, until both of his feet are muddy.

To afterwards follow into woods, underfoot bumpy, cruel ground.

He is anxious wants to cry, "Daddy, daddy! Mother, mother!" In the calm
night people breathing, several breaths like owl's cries.

The owl once listened. The owl most loved the crowing cock. When it was
killed, the owl soaked the dead cock with its tears. Good taught the owl to
count with difficulty. Nevertheless, the owl does not live its cries; it
lives in the bough that extends. It raises.

He does not dare to move, his heart thump-thump-jumps.

Nothing more happens. He crosses a channel and then sits, finally closing
his eyes, and soon falls asleep.

#

While Googling this I ran across a site for Shao Lin History,
which is where I found the quotation in the subject field. It seemed an
intriguing enough writer's prompt: and there a reasons for most everything
in life, so I was meant to use it for a writer's prompt. ;-) At least, from
a certain point of view.



♥ Today's Prompt

No good effort goes unpunished. ;-)

--

♥ [writesparks lite] Aren't you tired of staring at a blank page writers_libr...


7 Writing Muse Kickers to Fill Up That Blank Page
by Shery Ma Belle Arrieta-Russ


Nothing is more daunting for any writer than having to stare at a blank
sheet of paper.

When we stare at a blank sheet of paper, we often think, "What am I
going to write?" A few minutes later, it becomes, "Oh my goodness, I
can't think of anything to write!" And several minutes later, it turns
into something like, "Write, dangnabit! Write! Write! WRITE!"

Some writers call this writer's block. But I call it the
"Writing-Muse-Needs-A-Kick" syndrome.

And that's exactly what we're going to do with your writing muse gone
truant. We're going to kick her back into gear so you can fill up that
blank page.

Here are 7 writing muse kickers for you to try right now:

1. First Line: Begin a story with "There was once a chance I didn't
take..."

2. Cliche Starter: Weave a story or poem around the cliche, "keep your
powder dry."

3. Power of Metaphor: What does "a string of laughter" make you think of?

4. Proverb Mix: "Beauty breaks the camel's back."

5. Story Words: Use the words "pianist, pencil, high-rise building,
running shoes" in a story.

6. What If? Story: What if you're going to write a story about
betrayal, with a young man as the main character and a locket as the
key object? Set your story on a ranch.

7. Quick Prompt: Write about what you'd say to an uninvited guest.


(c) 2003-2004 Shery Ma Belle Arrieta-Russ

(In case you have a site or e-zine and you wish to use my article,
don't forget to include my resource box.)

=> My resource box: <=

Shery is the creator of WriteSparks! - a software that
generates over 10 *million* Story Sparkers for Writers.
Download WriteSparks! Lite for fr*e - http://writesparks.com
----------


♥ Today's Prompt: First Person, Present Tense

Write an argument. It can be an argument with one's self or with someone or something else. Put your self into the character's head, or write an argument that you might have. the only thing is, it has to be written like it's happening here and now.

Ah, yes - could you imagine arguing with your dog over a walk, if you have one? ;-)



♥ Internal and External Conflicts in Fiction

Plotting Inside and Out.

This is something to think about, something interesting to ponder. The internal versus the external life. The article is on the Long Ridge Writer's Group site. The article is called *

Plotting Inside and Out

Creating Internal and External Conflicts in Fiction

by Mary Rosenblum
*and I thought that you folks might find it interesting.

It's applicable toward scenes too. we have the external events and then we
have the internal reactions to the events. One good example of this I can
think of is Star Wars, episodes 4-6. The story is delineated so that we can
see Luke's internal as well as external journey. He starts off after his
uncle Owen and Aunt Beru are killed wanting revenge, which is his motivation
for beginning Jedi training. The story is as much about the way this
internal position changes (from wanting to fight the Empire to just wanting
to bring his father back to the Light Side) which, incidentally, means the
destruction of the Emperor as an incidental event, a deed accomplished by
his father Anakin, who dies from the attempt. The changes occur over the
movies, from having no family to learning about first his father in movie
two and then his sister in movie three. He's no longer the solitary, tragic
figure from the fist movie who came back to find his family killed by the
stormtroopers.

We can see the external plots too, the destruction of the first Death Star
in movie one, Jedi training (the means) in movie two, drawbacks and
accomplishments along the way.

That's why I like the Star Wars movies. It's a clear story arc, even with
all its faults. There may be formula, but parts of it are not exactly
predictable. This did not necessarily have to follow that, especially at the
end. Star Wars 1-3 didn't have that "feel" to them that 4-6 had, that sense
of completeness that left me satisfied at the end.

Do you have a scene written? Is there some way you can incorporate an
internal reaction/goal as a counterpoint to the external events? The results
might prove rather interesting.




♥ The Juorney writers_libr...


I know it's been very sporadic, but I have been trying to come up with
writing prompts and get computer access to post them.

One interesting exercise is starting from the end of a story and working our
way toward the beginning to see how everything was set up: effect and cause.
If the hero kills the dragon, then how does he kill it? What does he kill it
with? How did h obtain the object that he kills the dragon with? What does
he have to go through to get it? How did he know what he would need to kill
the dragon? Why does he want to kill the dragon in the first place?

All of the above, together, can be reversed to provide an outline for a
story. The story itself can be told in either narrative or poetic form.

Chances are that you've been thinking about stories for a while. Write the
ending of the story. Then think about your hero gets to the end. You don't
have to write the rest of it unless you want to: the important thing here is
thinking about how you could get to the beginning from the end, what would
work, what doesn't work, in the journey.


Enjoy!



♥ After Myriad Computer Problems, Here Are Some Prompts writers_libr...

I'm working on a book right now and it opens with the death of a
character. This is all part of the plot, the "loaded gun". But to set
everything up, you start with an intro scene, the set up to the event, then
move on to the event itself, and the scenes after that are the ones where
your protagonist deals with the event.

This can be written as a story or as a poem. William Shakespeare wrote much
in ballad form, and you can tell a story in poetic form, some of the best
poems work that way too.

The beginning, or "status quo" is the prologue, the calm before the storm,
the event leading up to The Change. Chance is necessary in fiction because
it sets the story in motion: but a few brush strokes to illustrate life
before the change underscores the importance of that change. It's a
technique that's not used in every story, but it can be used to good
advantage, mostly in novellas and novels, but sometimes in shorter works
(one example of the shorter work is Robert Sheckley's story "Pandora's Box
-- Open With Care" from the September 2000 issue of Fantasy & Science
Fiction).

Every writer seems to have some change in mind. What do you think might
happen before the change, as if to highlight and underscore the effects of
the change?



♥ Writing Prompt for the Day

Choose a picture at random. It can be a photograph or a drawing. Based on how s/he is dressed, the expression on their face,any number of things, invent a character summary for them. Name, rank and serial number - er, age, occupation, hobbies and pastimes, that sort of thing. Biography Info for Main Characters at writing-life.com lists questions and other data for a character bio. Have a bit of fun with it and see how it all comes out.


♥ Writing Prompt: Ambiguity


Shed Fat.

That was the subject line of a piece of spam that I deleted. My first
reaction? "I didn't know that sheds could get fat".

Today's e-mail is in such use that spam is a common problem, but there are
some that just hit a giggle button or elicit some other reacting from the
victim - er, recipient, and it is not necessarily the one that the sender
wants to convey.

Your writing prompt for today is to write a silly or ambiguous spam header.


♥ What would you get if you...

We all have our favorite kinds of animals. We all have our favorite kinds
of foods. What do you think that you would get if you combined them? In the
case of the elephant, so the joke goes, we would get either peanut butter
that never forgets or an elephant that sticks to the roof of your mouth.
Personally? I am rather fond of sushi and cats, so would I get a finicky
fish or a furry flounder?
For that matter, what would you get if you crossed an owl and a treacle tart...



♥ Today's Prompt

| Heir Conditioner |



♥ Horoscope Prompt?

I just checked my horoscope on MSN.com. I thought it would make a good
writing prompt.

As none of you know, I am a Virgo (not that I take horoscopes seriously).
Here is the horoscope for today.

Initiate a deep and meaningful conversation with someone you have lost touch
with over the years. It could be that a long and ugly point of contention is
on the brink of resolution. All you need to do now, dear Virgo, is to make
the first move. There is a great deal of heart-felt loving energy in the air
that will help aid you in fostering a sensitive, loving approach. Find a
connection with someone that you didn't know was there before.

For "someone you have lost touch with over they years" you can substitute
your protagonist, or any other character that you need to flesh out. As a
writer you do need a connection to your characters in order to write about
them, or else they come out a bit flat.

And poets, never fret - you can have this conversation with yourself in
prose form too. All of us have some small, buried bit that we are not proud
of, even if it might not seem like much of an issue to another person.
--

♥ It's all in how you see things.

http://www.csicop.org/sb/9912/i-files.html

Other than carnival oddities or illusions, write about something in your
everyday life, taking the perspective that it is like a carnival oddity or
illusion.



♥ Today's Prompt: Alternate History


*Alternate History by The Writers Store Team
Write an alternate history of a significant moment in your life. Think about what could have been if one key moment had been different.

This can apply to your character's history as well. It can be the road not taken, the alternate steps, the "what if?" scenario.




♥ Communication Between Author & Character

One good method for generating ideas and plain old writing is that of the character letter. I have posted three links to this email that I hope will help. Have your character write a letter, either to you or else to another character. What would they say in the letter?
**
A letter game
*(scroll down the page to find the details on it)
*Letter game
The Wonderful World Of Ghost Letters

Olio of Prompts IV

How's the weather where you are? Write a scene where two characters
are meeting each other, perhaps for the first time: an awkward
situation at best, they may know little about ach other, so have
them talk about the weather.

For that matter, you could even have it evolve into a dispute about
the weather, which might be funny. (I had this image of the woman
going home to mother because of the argument, LOL). Yes, this does
not have to be written man-woman: unless your character is of a,
shall we say, alternate preference and a well meaning but clueless
friend sets them up on a blind date with the opposite sex.

I'll have to write that one myself, LOL--I have just the characters
in mind.)


You know how you wake up when it's almost completely
dark. Maybe your eyes are unfocused when you first
wake up, but you begin to at least make out some
familiar shapes and forms. All colors turn to shades
of black and gray. Maybe you hear the ominous
crickets or *gasp* cicadas, or even croaking frogs.
If you live closer to the highway or in a more urban
area, you might even hear the elevated or the 3:20
run past you.

Anyway, write something about waking up in the dark,
poetry or prose, story or limerick. The style and
content are up to you. Have some fun with it. ;-)

(Do you think 'blind as a bat' means anything to a bat, since they
use sonar rather than vision to 'see' things?)



Have you been writing? If not, why? Write yourself a note excusing
your absence from writing (I'm doing the same thing now), telling
yourself why you haven't been writing.

We're writers. We have no one to answer to but ourselves: that means
we need to write down the reason(s) why we haven't been writing, so
we can forgive ourselves for it. *grin* Writing down the reasons we
haven't been writing not only gets us writing, but it can also give
us some idea on how to fix the problem(s). It's like journaling, you
write down the problem to clarify it to your mind so that you can
better think of ways to fix it.
What kinds of hobbies do you enjoy? Do you collect stamps? What if
you didn't know that you had a rare stamp but someone else found out
about it? If they didn't want you to know how valuable it was, what
lengths do you think s/he would go to, to get it from you? If the
stamp is important to you, perhaps for sentimental reasons...?

What kinds of hobbies do you have, and what do you think could lead
to the sorts of conflict that you enjoy reading about? I know, the
way I'm saying it is kind of lame, but you can write an interesting
story around it if you consider the possibilities.

Write about your interest(s) and what could get in the way, or what
could happen. What are the possibilities that you see for both worst-
and best-case scenarios?




Despite what you might think of the prompt above, there are many
interpretations of alien societies. This is an exercise in seeing
your own world through different eyes, as if you were seeing it for
the first time.

Look at your everyday routine. You do many things as a matter of
course, going through your day. There are many things that you take
for granted because you have always done them, or always been able
to do them.

List the things that you do every day. Now, how would those habits
change if, say, you had forepaws instead of hands? That might change
the way you comb your hair and how you push the buttons on the
remote. (The design of the remote if everyone had claws, for
instance, would likely have inverted switches rather than
extroverted buttons, since claws can reach into such nice little
niches).

You can choose any alterations you prefer; the idea is describing
how you would manage an ordinary day when some new element has been
added to the mix.



Do you have a character who will stoop to anything to get what they
want? Or perhaps lie in order to keep a loved one out of jail, or
worse? Whether ignoble or for a perceived 'just' cause, write
something about someone who lies, or tells a lie. Not just any lie,
say, but perhaps a lie which gets another person in serious trouble,
perhaps even themselves.

I'm not exactly addicted to soap operas, but I do watch 'Passions'.
The show has a witch, that's why. (They've also ripped on such shows
as The Osbournes, The Adams Family, and Bewitched, and even had Dr
Bombay [sp?], the witch's name is Tabitha, and her daughter's name,
the demon-baby, is Endora). ;-) Port Charles had a vampire and it's
in reruns on SoapNet, so I've been catching up on the vampire-
hunting and angels and the storyline. (If I remember right, The
Avatar is the next storyline). Days of Our Lives had the serial
killer storyline and they're going into a rip on The Prisoner right
now--fun! I'll stop watching them when they get too tediously
romantic and sappy, of course. ;-) There's only so much of that
dreck I can stomach.

Soap operas are one source, but you have examples of false witness
and these kinds of things, like the kids who turn in their parents
in 1984, or even in that one episode of South Park which parodied
Logan's Run. In the movie Logan's Run itself (and in the book you
went to Carousel at 21, not 30), the first big lie was saying that
Logan was actually older than he was so that he could do a little
detective work, and then he uncovered the bigger lie about the
outside world and all that, and that there was a world far beyond
the one in which he'd been raised.

Writers essentially tell lies, too--fabrications which make up
interesting stories. They're real enough to us, sometimes we've
lived with these characters for decades before writing them down on
paper.

(Don't forget the Salem Witch Trials--lying about your neighbors for
this reason or that, even with the Spanish Inquisition...)

Whether a simple little thing between a parent and child or a major
thing which could cost lives and reputations, or anywhere in
between, write a story about a lie that may seem harmless enough but
which turns into a major thing or row. A Quest for the Truth can be
an interesting one.


How do you feel when you get a stomachache? What about of someone
you know, who you're face-to-face with, has a stomachache? How would
you describe your own stomachache? What do you notice about someone
else with one?

Some stomachaches make you clutch at your abdomen. Some can actually
make you be sick (like on the carpet or in the porcelain basin).
Some give you the runs (Why do they cal it the runs when you're not
on your feet at all, but instead rather stationary?) and some
actually make you belch at either end. (How many ways can you
describe a fart attack, anyway? LOL--gas can cause quite the
stomachache.) Some are so bad that the layperson can even mistake it
for appendicitis or even labor.

There are many different kinds of stomachaches and many reactions of
different people to those folks who have stomachaches. Have a bit of
fun (or angst) writing something about someone with a stomachache.



I used to have (it may still lurk somewhere hereabouts) a button I
picked up at NorEasCon II which asks the eternal question--more of a
statement, actually--'an elevator that's afraid of heights?'

In the book series for Harry Potter, a major thing which has even
been a plot point, at least in the second book, was Ron Weasley's
fear of spiders.

Indiana Jones had an almost pathological fear of snakes. ;-)

There are things that we fear. I know that two of my greatest
phobias, which I worked hard to overcome and, if not vanquish, at
least reached an understanding with, were a fear of crowds and a
fear of heights. Of course, I'm also a bit claustrophobic and a bit
agoraphobic. I think almost everyone has a fear, for example, of
being buried alive. At one point in my life I also avoided such
things as cracks on a sidewalk (even those parts that were separated
while the concrete was drying which to my mind were more ordered
cracks), black cats crossing my path, spilt salt and walking under
ladders; now, if a black cat crosses my path, I'll try to scritch it
behind the ears and maybe meow at it, I usually don't worry about
cracks on the sidewalks (of course, Mom died a few years back, but
refusal of the curse thing came a decade or two before that event)
and sometimes I'll even go out of my way to walk under a ladder,
unless it looks too unstable and as if it might fall on someone's
head. There's more danger walking on the streets of New York, where
the facades of some buildings are decaying to the point where
concrete topples to the sidewalk from several stories aboveground.

Of course, I'm not talking about the big things that we're all
afraid of, just the little things that are very much like quirks of
personality.

What kind of phobia can you imagine a character of yours having? A
little one, like Ron's fear of spiders, can go a long way and even
provide fodder for a plot point. A vampire who faints at the sight
of blood, a dragon who's afraid of fire (so long as it's a fire-
breathing one), an angel or bird who's afraid of heights (taking
into account the common representation of an angel, translated as
messenger, being this winged, flying creature). If you even want to
be a bit inane, how about a unicorn who fears virgins or a
multibillionaire who suffers from Imposter Syndrome?


We all know the one joke about the person who opened the fortune
cookie whose message reads 'Help! I'm trapped in a fortune cookie
factory!'. We also know that lots of folks put messages in bottles
or attach them to balloons and send them off to see where they will
end their journey.

There are a few possibilities in this to start any genre of story,
not just the mundane. Could you imagine someone concealing a message
in a pot roast or a cherry pie?

Messages themselves can take many forms. I've heard or read, I don't
remember where, that someone put something in a stew or a bowl of
soup (not necessarily paper) where, although they might now be
written down, they send a clear message to the recipient of said
message.

Write yourself down a list of the possibilities that you see in
this, and then have some fun writing a story or scene (even a flash)
about one of the listed possibilities that you've thought up.



For today (even if I'm posting this late) think about a character
that you would like to try to write. Tomorrow, decide where the
story will take place, and make sure that it suits the character's
story (whether it's a place familiar or not to your character is
your decision alone.

Sunday -- well when you decided on your character--who s/he is, et
cetera--and then the setting, you might have had an idea in mind
for what happens; if not, then write down several ideas on a piece
of paper as they occur to you, even if some of them seem either
stupid and/or evil rather than what you would as a rule write.
Free writing that list will, with luck, give you an idea of what you
want to write about.

Remember to plan for conflict! If we make it a conflict with the
environment, for example, one of your silly ideas might be something
like (given an office setting):

* overworked copier
--goes on strike demanding better wages, toner and working hours
--goes postal and starts shooting people (what ammunition? Toner and
paper, probably, maybe little gears)
--Gets delusional and thinks it's Britney Spears and starts trying
to sing (can you imagine it? *shudder*)

That's given an office environment, of course. A cash register might
have a similar list, and there are more possibilities, but you get
the idea. When you've finally reached momentum writing this, just
write the ideas down for five minutes straight, no looking back
till you're done. You can always keep a tape recorder handy to keep
a verbal record of additional ideas while you're looking over what
you've just written. Sometimes, five minutes isn't quite enough
time. ;-)

Then, write a flash piece, or a short story, about the Battle of the
Copier (or the Register's Rebellion, or whatever). You might have
more than a few good ideas and you can always write more, should you
be so inclined--the idea's just to get to writing.




Describe an apple. What does the shape look like? Does it remind you
of anything? Try to describe the taste of the apple--tart, sweet,
the texture. The color, maybe the variety of apple (I remember
eating a crabapple when I was an adolescent, green, tart, with
texture both crunchy and at the same time chewy, what I guess you
would call crisp, it was almost round but more of an oblong shape,
indented at the top where that wick like thing would come out, I
guess that's the vine or whatever you call it part that it hung from
the tree on, and that dimple thing at the bottom, following both
sides of the seedy core at the center. You could eat the top and the
bottom and sometimes even some of the fleshy parts around the seeds,
even if they had this hard, seedcase-y thing around them...)

What's the best way to eat an apple? Peeled, segmented, or just
biting into it?

BTW, why do you think most folks associate apples with the forbidden
fruit in the garden of Eden> Why didn't anyone think it could be,
say, a tomato (which until at some point in the late 19th century,
most folks thought it was poison). A tomato, at least until
recently, was classified as a fruit. If it's a vegetable now but it
was considered a fruit at one point, it could have been a forbidden
fruit, since it didn't taste as sweet as most fruits. It has seeds,
too, but spread throughout rather than at its core, like the ones in
an apple.

Why do folks think of it as an apple and not, say, a tomato, banana,
orange, grapefruit, plum, peach, cherry, pear (which is close in
some respects to the apple, though closer to a potbellied than
spherical shape)? It's just something to ponder.



I'm sorry, but this one is inspired by all the insipid popups that
interfere when you're trying to type in web addresses or something.
Me, I'm a hunt-and-peck typist, not a keyboardist. When that
happens, I'm usually looking at the keyboard and not the monitor if
I have something I feel is important enough to say, and I want to
say it before it slips my mind (lots of stuff does seem to,
nowadays). Anyway, when I realize what's happened, I've already
forgotten what I was trying to say, or else I've forgotten half of it,
or my train of thought has derailed, or Terror (mainly this one)
wants the computer. Grr, it may be her computer, but I pay for the
online, and my own computer refuses to work (you know how
temperamental these computers get, they're geezers when they're two
years old and outdated after a month).

Anyway, what are the ways you handle these popups, this 'visual
spam'? How many ways from Sunday would you like to strangle the
folks responsible for it? *grin* I mean, spam e-mail’s bad enough
without popups.

We need some way to let off the steam. ;-) Who knows, you might even
get a story out of it, like 'The Haunted Popup' or 'The Popup That
Wouldn't Die' or something. Even, if you wrote fanfic of any type or
just want the speculation,, how different sorts of popups would work-
-like, say, in the Max Headroom universe or in Harry Potter's world.
Even in the Star Wars Universe, how do you think a popup would
work? Remember, you have holograms, so even Princess Leia's request
to Obi=Was Kenobi could have turned into an advert.



They say that 'turnabout is fair play'. Do you write poetry as a
rule? Try to write something that you feel would be the opposite of
poetry. Do you like romance? Perhaps the opposite would be fighting
(even though some forms of the romance genre do equate the two, as
in the 'kiss and make up' variety). If you write war stories, then
write an anti-war story.

Hmm... Come to think of it, the anti-poem, the anti-romance, the
anti-humor, the anti-drama... It might be better and more coherent
to add that prefix and then write something about it. For example,
if you like SF, then write an anti-SF piece. That's open to
interpretation, so go with your impression of the antithesis of SF.
What would an anti-poem look like?

Even if you journal, rather than write the other kinds of stuff,
make an anti-journaling entry. Have some fun with it--and sometimes,
trying to write something's opposite (especially when you're stuck
on something you're working on) can give you a better idea of how to
move forward with whatever you're working on.

Please excuse me, I'm going to have a cup of anti-tea now....




LIFE IS WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU'RE MAKING OTHER PLANS

or

THE BEST LAID PLANS....



Speaking of prompts, how's this one?


BEYOND HELP


That's how I feel, sometimes (LOL).

An alternate (and John is familiar with this title) could be

Temple of the Dead Cow

(that's what I call the local Burger King.




You've seen a highway, right? Whether you live by or have driven down them, the critters are inescapable. ;-)

Closing your eyes, ignoring visual cues, how would you describe the highway? What's the traffic like, high or low volume? How does the air taste around it? I've noticed that, depending on the traffic, road and car conditions, you can actually taste as well as smell the exhaust fumes in the air. Do your best to try to write a sensory description of it without using visual cues.



What's your favorite flavor ice cream? Why do you like it? Try to describe it as best you can--flavor, texture, color... Do you get an ice cream headache? I never seen to, but I think I did once. it sort of feels like a band stretched across your head in a way, doesn't it? Brain freeze, gotta gronk it. ;-)




I've taken to making canned soup and adding things to it, treating the canned stuff as sort of a base. I like adding fresh vegetables, but that isn't always possible, so I've used frozen ones. Canned vegetables also work quite well.

If you've ever seen the list for the 37 dramatic situations, that's like a base. You add your own ingredients to the mix to make it into a flavorful soup or stew. I know that copies of the list were available online


The Thirty-six (plus one) Dramatic Situations
http://www.sff.net/people/julia.west/CALLIHOO/ideagen2.htm

I just did a random Google search




I was going to try to write this in a seat-of-my-pants rhyme, but for the purpose of illustration it wouldn't work.

I'm making the assumption that you all listen to songs. I do, too--and like Weird Al or any true filker, I like writing parodies or twists on the songs (for example, Madonna's Like A Virgin and Weird Al's Like a Surgeon, I twisted that around to "Like Ted Sturgeon, though I'm still working on that one. I don't know if you remember the song with the lyrics "rock on to electric avenue" but I twisted that around to "type on to selectric avenue", if you remember Selectric type




Take an aphorism and twist it on its ear. Who knows, maybe you'll be able to use it as a title for a story or poem. For example, you know how folks say that you can't find a needle in a haystack. Then there's the princess and the pea. You can't find a princess in a needle of a pea in a haystack, or a princess in a haystack and a needle in a pea? Well, you know what I mean. Even a princess eating peas who sits in a haystack and finds the needle when she sits on it (ouch). They do say that the buttocks tends to be one of the more sensitive parts of one's body.




An elevator that's afraid of heights? A rabbit afraid of carrots? A sith lord afraid of the dark?

Sometimes, little faults make the characters interesting. A vampire who's afraid of blood, do you think he'd turn veggie? Sap instead of blood? It's still a life stream thing.

Why is the thought of a vampire afraid of, say, bubble gum occurring to me now? Mm, maybe it'll make his teeth stick, or something...




Some folks add a list of words and tell you to use them in a written piece. Maybe I'll break from group tradition and try that. Hmm, let's see, creative use of words and places...

Winnemucca, Nevada
Slots
Rutabagas
Extraterrestrial
Out-of-this-world
submarine
hoagie
lime Ricky
Spiderman
shellfish
gargoyle




Precedent

You have an event. Write about what leads up to the event, with the culmination of the story being the event itself. (I know, copout, LOL).




Write a scene or a poem about a betrayal where a lifelong friend turns
their back on a protagonist.


From the Surrealist Compliment Generator:
:


Fast blinking reveals the true visage of time pieces hidden within your
eyes.

Hm, fast blinking. That could be an eye, a malfunctioning traffic light, the funny blinky light on your VCR when the power dies and then comes back on... Time pieces could be memories, bits of the past, blocks of time, a load of appointments that you're not sure that you will make it all to on time. It can be anything. What does it call to your mind?

Enjoy!





A Grave Endeavor.






Chakra Surgery

Sacred Centers: <Chakra
The word chakra is Sanskrit for wheel or disk and signifies one of seven basic energy centers in the body. Each of these centers correlates to major nerve ganglia branching forth from the spinal column. In addition the chakras also correlate to levels of consciousness, archetypal elements, developmental stages of life, colors, sounds, body functions, and much, much more.




A dark and stormy knight.
(I could not resist that one)

Ides of August

Ides of August

Et tu, brute?

Nah, that was March, this is August, what they call the "dog days", lord knows why. And why did I just think of Stephen King's "Cujo"? *sigh*

Anyway, dogs and idea--hope that works for you. Otherwise, I remember when my brothers had a can labeled "Campbell's Spider Soup" (you know Mad Magazine, right? This was back in the '60s). What kinds of strange foods are out there, anyway?

For some strange reason, the thought occurred to me to seek the
meaning of the Ides of August. I keep reading all this stuff
like "the Eighth Day of the Ides of August", so I wanted to clarify for folks that the ides seem to fall on either the 13th or the 15, the same as it mentioned on the site of the first link I posted (in the previous message). I do think there might be enough information in these links to give you a few story or poem (or even essay or journal entry) ideas.


http://www.theidesofmarch.com/home.htm

http://astrology.about.com/library/weekly/aa031500a.htm?once=true&

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/special_report/1999/02/99/e-cyclopedia/296942.stm

http://whoosh.org/epguide/ides.html

http://www.aurochs.org/zlib/cgi/date_roman

http://www.medievalgenealogy.org.uk/cal/junsus.htm

http://www.hardydetectiveagency.com/evergreen/idesofaugust/idesintro.htm

http://www.madkane.com/wwwboard/messages/1617.html

http://www.the-privateer.com/gold/week117.html

http://ragz-international.com/battle_of_adrianople_ammianus___.htm

http://www.fellowshipofisis.com/jc/jcaug9.html

http://www.well.com/user/aquarius/seeck.htm

http://www.woso.com/BuenVivir/detalles.asp?bvid=138&cid=4

http://users.erols.com/jesterbear/notes/torches.html

http://www.earlychristianwritings.com/lightfoot/pt1vol2/hippo17.html

http://www.caw.org/greenegg/greenegg_oz.html

http://www.mysticwicks.com/showthread.php?t=6940

http://www.skepticfiles.org/krish/harmconv.htm

http://www.webofoz.org/heritage/Lammas.shtml

http://www.wrh.noaa.gov/hanford/newsletr/fall01/summary.htm

http://www.brown.edu/Research/Catskills_Institute/tanney/bungalow14.html

http://omega.cohums.ohio-state.edu/mailing_lists/CLA-L/2001/08/0555.php

http://p199.ezboard.com/fchurchofthespiritfrm7.showMessage?topicID=60.t opic

Olio of Prompts III

A "Dear John" Letter

You have a favorite character, be it an historical or contemporary, literature, television, or movie one. Write them a letter (even if, as in the case of a real person) and tell them you like them and they're, if not your favorite, then one of your favorite characters. Antiheroes that you love works, too. Go with the first one that springs to mind.

In a way, that's like analyzing why his or her characterization or persona works for you. If there are things you don't like about the character, list them too, it's like a character analysis. It's almost like a fan letter, but it's a letter, so you can ask them how their family or friends are, how the invention or adventure or life in general is coming along, is Auntie May still working on the farm or has her arthritis worsened...

Yes, comic book characters count, too. Many of them become movie characters anyway, so... LOL.


Pooped Promptress Goes Goth: Funereal Flavor

We all deal with death, in one form or another.
I myself have lost a father, an uncle, two
grandfathers, two grandmothers, two cats... Not to
mention other things. A television dies, a computer
dies... Even, so it has been said, getting a divorce
is like dealing with death. In a way, it is: it's
the death of a life together and the beginning of a
life apart. (Except for my ex, since it was the
beginning of his engagement and subsequent
marriage, LOL)

Anyway, talk about dealing with the death of a loved
one, be they formerly animate or formerly and
currently inanimate. I know that a funeral for a
computer sounds silly, but you could have a lot of
fun writing it as a dark and somber piece--unless
you really and truly did lose a computer that you
dearly loved.


Sometimes, writing about and dealing with death
reflects how we live our lives. Happy writing!






evol tsol



Have you ever lost a love, particularly a great one?
I'm not necessarily talking romance novel-type love
here: the 'lost love' could be a person, yes, but it
could also be a place or thing. A cat lover who
develops a severe, life-threatening allergy to cats
that just will not respond to medication (same with
any pet), someone who loves gambling but has been
blacklisted and banned from all the gambling houses
in Nevada and New Jersey, a person for whom smoking
provides their greatest joy and comfort in life but
lives in a nonsmoking building, works in a
nonsmoking environment AND develops an allergy to
cigarettes (or worse yet, a chocolate lover who....
*sigh* Good thing I'm not allergic to it, LOL). A
stuffed animal that you were so attached and
devoted to that just disappeared one day (your
parents never told you that they threw it out)...

What is the greatest love, the greatest passion in
your life? What if that object d'amour were taken
from you?

Yes, prohibition counts too. ;-)

(I think that for me, it would be writing or
television. They already cancelled Port Charles. *
sniff* Thank ghu for reruns!)



PROMPT response: Synopsis

I've enclosed a few links to synopsis writing here;
there have been a few schools of thought on writing
novel synopses, and it is commonly accepted that you
write them in third person, present tense, so it's like
the action is happening here and now.

Some synopses may read like short stories. They start
with a key phrase or question, something to catch an
editor's eye, then lists your main character(s) and
gives a bare-bones framework of the main plot. Just sit
down for five minutes and write something liek a
synopsis. Let's say, for the sake of argument, that
you write it something like:

Can someone write a novel synopsis in five minutes:

Joe Blow from Idaho
An honest fellow from Hoboken (though with that name,
folks always teased him and he always hated it) has
five minutes to write the synopsis for a novel, but
he's never tried to write anything before in his life.
By day (even if he's on the graveyard shift), he's a
grocery store clerk.

The phone rings and Joe picks it up. It's a call from
his ex-wife and his kids are being held hostage at
K-Mart by some guy who's asking for a rocket to take
him to Mars or something, she's ot quite sure (Say
her name is Jane Doe, when they were married it was
Jane Doe Blow and may have been part of what led to
their divorce)....

Anyway, I think you get the idea. You think of the
basic story that you want to tell, then come up with
a crisis. Joe can have an average of three tries to
resolve the crisis, but it can be anywhere from two
to five, each crisis a bit more intense then the
previous one. The final crisis is what we call
the "black moment" or major point in the story.

I came up with that one just off the top of my head,
maybe being partway silly. Whether or not you plan to
write a book, see if you can write a synopsis for a
book that you might like to write, or something that
you might like to read (if not write). Have a little
fun with it.

LINKS:

Five Steps To Writing A Synopsis (by Vivian Teresa Beck)
The five basic building blocks to writing a synopsis.
http://www.vivianbeck.com/writing/tips/five_steps.htm

How do I write a book synopsis?
Writing a synopsis is sometimes harder than writing a book. Here are
some tips to writing a synopsis that sells.
http://il.essortment.com/synopsiswriteb_rqmx.htm

Lecture Three - Synopsis Overview
Generally, a short, 2-3 page synopsis is included with your query
letter. If the publisher likes this submission, the editor will
request a longer proposal, generally the first three chapters of
your work and sometimes a long, 10-15 page synopsis. As always, this
can vary from house to house so please follow the guidelines/request
of your target publisher.
http://www.canby.com/buzz/syn_lecture_three.htm

Mastering the Dreaded Synopsis - Condensing Your Novel (by Lee
Masterson)
Writing a synopsis is one of the most daunting chores a writer must
face. After spending months lovingly crafting a complex plot,
realizing and nurturing a cast of characters and painstakingly
selecting the right prose for descriptions, how do you then
summarize your masterpiece in just 2 or 3 pages?
http://www.fictionfactor.com/articles/synopsis.html

Outlining Your Script or Story by Thomas B. Sawyer
A synopsis is generally defined as a one-to-four page narrative
description of what happens in your story, told with some sizzle,
since it will likely be used as a selling tool –- to entice an
agent, publisher or producer to take a look at your manuscript.
http://www.writersstore.com/article.php?articles_id=105

WRITING THE SYNOPSIS (FOR FICTION) -- Farris Literary Agency, Inc.
The idea is to simply tell your entire story, from start to finish,
as briefly and succinctly as you can.
http://www.farrisliterary.com/tips%20for%20writers.htm#Synopsis

Writing The Dreaded Synopsis by Carolyn Jewel

http://www.carolynjewel.com/craft/synopsis.shtml
87
From: "Elizabeth Anne Ensley"
Date: Sun May 9, 2004 7:10am
Subject: PROMPT: Prompt


How many words can you get from the word prompt, aside
from romp and prom? Maybe you could write about a romp
at a prom (John, that might not be so hard for you,
knowing what you've told me of yours LOL). Maybe a
virtual prom (pROM?) or a prompt at a virtual prom
(pROMP). Heck, 'morphine' came to my mind, and that
only uses some of the same letters. ;-)

Take five minutes to get as many words as you can,
either from it of anything that comes to mind like my
getting that morphine for some weird reason. Use it
to spark something you can write about--maybe you're
reminded of an event from your own senior prom (I
never had one myself, so I don't). Maybe it happens
to one of your characters.

The most important thing here (and I always stress
htis, don't I?) is to have fun with it, see what you
come up with--even maybe a tribble prom or a lizard
prom, or... or even not a prom at all. ;-)


Subject: imPROMPtu: Ingenuous Response

Here's an extra, since I didn't think I'd be on today: create a
writing prompt.

Why am I asking you to create a writing prompt? Well, don't we all
have some problem area or areas in our writing that give us
problems? Your exercise could reflect that and suggest writing it--
an exercise in thinking outside the box. You know you need to work
on some aspect of your writing: if you were you, how would you
suggest working on it? *grin*


: i m P T O M P T u : Jotting something down

On one Y-list, we had a discussion about jotting something down on
paper when you have an idea. Something about "Boy meets Martian, boy
loses Martian..." Something along those lines. My own jots concern
character plotlines, usually.

This mission, should you choose to accept it *grin*L

1. Today, jot down the "something meets something" or some such
outline. It can just be an arbitrary thing, like "dog meets cat" or
some such, along those lines, I suppose that would be the basic
sketch of an idea.

2. Take a look at the very basic outline you did, and just label it
the elements in it. Give the characters names and some arbitrary
quirks, like "sings in the rain, shower, whatever", drinks coffee
black, enjoys peace, quiet, solitude... If you have two characters,
gfive them each at least one opposite quirk, like noise versus
quiet, party animal versus lone wolf.

3. Write something about a conflict between these two characters
involving the quirks.

You can have any variation of this story. "Man Versus Machine"
essentially makes the machine a character, and "man versus Nature"
personifies nature, like a hurricane, rain, sunshine, earthquake...
You get the idea. I think the earthquake thing might involve more of
a novel outline than a shorter piece, but that’s okay. A story about
sibling rivalry works, too, including the ever-waging Battle For The
Remote.

Sometimes, personality differences lead to conflict, and therein
lies the story. Have some fun with it, and I'll see y'all on Monday.

imPROMPTu: Hunger pangs.

How do you feel when you're really, really hungry? What are the
physical sensations you experience? Does it make your stomach move
around inside and feel as if you have an alien trapped inside,
waiting to tear through the lining and flesh to the world outside?
Does your stomach demand food, perhaps loud enough to be heard
several blocks away? Is your mind focused on the hunger, or can you
pay attention to other things? Does your focus waver from subject to
subject because the tummy keeps distracting you?

Describe a physical hunger. If that stumps you, there are other
types of appetites. I just thought of the food kind because I
haven't had any breakfast yet. *grin*



imPROMPTu: A Day in the Life...

Have you ever read a story where at its beginning the protagonist
woke and at the end they nodded off to sleep? Daily life isn't a
story unless something truly unusual, strange, horrific--different--
happens to the protagonist. A car accident, extraterrestrial
kidnapping and subsequent escape or adaptation to the alien society,
revelation of some kind (divorce, religious/antireligious. free
lunch when you usually didn't have one and what are they up to, and
so forth).

What can you cook up, if you began by letting your protagonist open
their eyes? Where would the day carry them?


Subject: InPROMPTu: Lost

This can relate to late, being lost. There's lost time, lost money,
lost child, lost inspiration, lost status, lost memory (amnesia or
Alzheimer's or even *shudder* a Senior Moment). There are lost
goals, dreams, life, death (like in "Meet Joe Black" or "Death
Takes A Holiday" or even a story about Death having amnesia, so that
would kind of be the LOST lost or the lost LOST), the lost (spilt
*sic*) milk or salt, derailed trains of thought... A missing
Christian could even be referred to as the "lost found" (if you have
ever heard the hymn Amazing Grace you might get that one LOL).

Something's lost. It could be something very important to you, which
would be tragedy; something you THOUGHT was important but you
realize that it's really not, but only after it's lost: something
that's not important to you, but that you find out was really
important ("for want of a nail..."); or else it could be something
that you don't really care about and don't really need, but every
darn thing that oyu see or hear around that particular time reminds
you of it (which borders on comedic lost). there are quite a few
things oyu could do with it, trying to tail an invisible man, even.

At any rate, whether you've lost your direction, your car keys, your
mind... I think you could get a story or sixteen out of it.

Please excuse me. I need to go get a cup of coffee before I start
writing. Enjoy!


Subject: Impromptu Prompt: Overdrive?


"I'm late! I'm late! For a very important date!"

I know, I've only seen the video, haven't read the book yet--but
sometimes you're just late due to circumstances beyond your control.

However, if your character is late, it could lead them straight into
an adventure or story, a string of circumstances which alters their
path. Can you think of any good examples of this in fiction, poetry
or real life?

Good, bad, or indifferent--tardiness happens, as do things
associated with it. At times, it could be advantageous...


Subject: Prompt for 29 April 2004: The Road Not Taken

Do you ever wonder what your life would be like if you had done that
instead of this? What about the opera singer who wanted to sell ice
cream from a truck when he was a child, perhaps because the ice
cream truck made him so happy when it came and for some reason his
life is miserable in the present day. The policeman who wanted to be
a fireman, the housewife who wanted to dance ballet... Heck, we all
have a 'what if', like me moving to Pennsylvania on the spur of the
moment in 1983 and getting married instead of going to Stony Brook
to study astronomy.

For yourself, for your character, think of the road not taken. Where
do you think that either you or your character would be today, if
you had taken that other road? You probably know at least a little
something that you could even extrapolate from your present day life
(like me and my poor eyesight, ROTFLMAO). There would have been
obstacles, of course, but have some fun thinking of ways that
perhaps you could have overcome them--or what you may have ended up
doing, if you started out on that other road and found that for one
reason or another, you couldn't travel that initial path and had to
choose, perhaps, a similar one.


Subject: Writing Prompt for Wednesday 28 April 2003: Reading

Reading might seem like a strange writer's prompt; however, you
might be surprised at the idea you can get from reading newspapers
or magazines, even from books. I'm not talking about plagiarism
here, but "what if". Even if I haven't worked with one particular
what-if scenario yet, the guy who barricaded himself and his family
in the closet and they committed mass suicide because they thought
it was the end of the world (doomsday scenario), even others, there
are so many what if factors involved with something like that. For
example, if someone in that family, that this was all in their head
and the world as they thought they knew it did come to an end and
the epilogue reveals that they lived in an alien society and this
world was all in their mind (of course, you'd have to foreshadow
this in snippets and scenes throughout the story). You could do
something silly, like the person they thought was their father, was
really an emcee in disguise for some show like "you bet your life"
(which could go either way, life or death). Maybe it would be that
the while thing was a reality TV show and they had to find a way to
save the extras, costars and bit players, not to mention the show's
star, without giving away the plot or scenario to the clueless star.

There are more scenarios that you could construct with such a
snippet. The point is reading, and letting your imagination decide
which idea you'd clip, copy or otherwise save and put in your ideas
file, the 'easy bake over' of the imagination, or whatever, and
cogitate and ponder. Perhaps a story would suggest itself right
away, perhaps it has potential and doesn't become an idea overnight.
The point of it is, you're gathering fodder for your writing,
whether or not you write an article, poem or story.

Good hunting!



Subject: Writing Prompt for Tuesday 04/27/04

As usual, a day late and a dollar short. ;-) No excuses,
even if I did go to the doctor's yesterday, then fell
asleep on the couch. Today will be busy, too. *sigh*

Anyway. have you ever tried writing a scene and found
that you were stuck, because you couldn't figure out
where you wanted to take it? I just had a scene outlined
with a creature (magical) studying half-understood human
books and speech because she was impressed with the human
who, ten years earlier, had helped to form a peace and an
agreement between her race and another one. She was going
to be visited by another of her species, one who disdained
books or anything else human; and while he wasn't going to
try to do anything now, because she's been accepted by a
previous leader and is useful only in one aspect to the
current leader of her folk, she knows that given half the
chance, he or any other member of her race would destroy
these borrowed tomes. It took me a couple of days to figure
out that before she does what the new leader wants, she
would come back and wrap these books There aren't many of
them at a time, since she's always worried about the
possibility that her folk might try to destroy them) that she
would pack and take them with her quickly when she's ordered
by the leader to deliver a message to the other species most
of whom aren't too keen on humans either, despite their
leader and a few others who have engaged in a study of
humans and even a mutually beneficial alliance, seeing as
one human is living among them and has even helped quite
a few of them), about an alliance and war against the humans.
It occurred to me that these books and her responsibility
towards the borrowed tomes and returning them would be
foremost in her mind. (The human language, thanks to several
factors became a language of commerce between the two diverse
species, and she’s the only one of her race who bothered to
attempt to study the language).

Anyway, when it occurred to me that the books were important
enough to her that she would go bundle them up so she could
return them to her human friend who is living among the ogres
and warn him of what the leader plans--war against humans.

It took a while to find a key element to start writing this
particular scene (set, actually, since it will involve more
than one scene).It's just as well, too; she might be a minor
player in the scheme of things, but she moved up from third
level helper (no VP) to second level (minor story arc and
viewpoint--the works). That's not what they call it in the
writing manuals, that's just what I call it--second- and
third-level characters. First level are the main characters--
protagonist, antagonist. They haven't called it that in the
writing manuals I've seen (yet).

You have something you're stuck on, right? I think we all do,
at one point or another: but look through what you do have,
what you want in the scene, poem, whatever, some common
element, something that you have clearly indicated is
important to your character. Perhaps you can use that
object or element as a crux for your scene? Failing that,
think about what's most important to you. What if your house
or apartment was on fire and you could take only one thing
with you. What is the most important thing to you? What
would you take with you to escape the fire? Why would you
take it? What is its value to you? I know it's a hard
decision for anyone to make; I made it simple for my
character since by their nature these folk have few or
no physical possessions. I guess it's figuring out what's
most important in life to an individual. If you're stuck
with a scene, though, something like this might help.






Writing Prompts List Extra: Writing Exercises

My bad, I know that I'm not very good sometimes, maintaining this
list and posting writing exercises. BTW, you all are also welcome to
post them too. ;-)

http://freelancewrite.about.com/c/ec/9.htm

What's that link? Why, it's for a daily 15 minute writing
exercise/prompt list type thingie that comes to your inbox.

Just in case y' all were interested...



Subject: Writing Prompt for Fri 23 April 2004: Writing Goals

http://www.writefromhome.com/writingtradearticles/320.htm

I began with a link to something called 'Writing From Home" or
some such. I just viewed it. It's an article (one of many) about
setting writing goals.

You all know by now that I'm pretty bad at that, myself. *grin* I
want to post a writing exercise here every day, but it's not easy--
two people using one computer, for instance (my daughter and me, and
so much for the DSL that AT&T does not offer out here yet. *sigh* I
mean, we could have gone wireless...)

Since it's Friday, I've tried to get these exercises to hold you for
the weekend, so it's the perfect opportunity to take fifteen minutes
to a half hour a day (or five minutes here and there on the toilet
or cooking dinner or even during the commercial breaks for American
Idol or something) to reflect on your writing goals. Where are you
in your writing, and where do you want to go with it? Do you just
keep a journal? Are you writing short stories for yourself, or to
submit them to a market ? Pro, semi-pro, 4theluv, what? Poetry? Are
you writing a novel? (I know that I'm working on one, and I've tried
to set a goal of one full scene per day, but it's a little hard to
get started when you're bogged down in detail. I have one scene that
takes place in a solar and I finished it yesterday, but it didn't
read the right way so I had to go back and find my notes so I could
sketch a bit more detail into it. Luckily, I don't have to do that
for all my writing LOL).

The major point of goal setting is to say you're going to do
something, and then just do it. You need to allow for flexibility in
the schedule, and you need realistic goals. For instance, say that
you have fifteen minutes to write something one day, twenty minutes
the next, forty-five on another day, and so forth. I think that with
the goal setting, you want to say that you will write for at least
fifteen minutes a day, which means that if you have a little more
time, you'll write for a little bit longer.

Think about your writing goals over the weekend, then take five
minutes on Monday at some point to write them down. They don't have
to be detailed plans, because you want to be able to read them
quickly, perhaps each morning while you're dressing for the day, The
important thing here is to set realistic goals, ones that you can
adhere to, that you can follow without looking at it, shaking your
head, and saying "That's too hard right now, I'll do it tomorrow"
only tomorrow stretches on towards infinity and it never gets done.

Granted, goal setting works for more things then writing--but htis
is a writing prompts list. However, if any part of this helps with
another aspect of your life, feel free to adapt, that's the
creativity of the human spirit. ;-)




Subject: Writing Prompt for Thu Apr 22, 2004 8:28 am: In The News...

You're aware of the news, right?

A mouse with two female parents, no male involvement, and no
cloning. That kind of thing can give rise to a lot of idea, like
the reactions of the mice (anthropomorphism), a human’s reaction to
it, alien reaction...

You're people, so you know how people think about it. Try to
free write a gut reaction to this or another news story, your choice,
your call. it might prove interesting...






Subject: Prompt for Fri Apr 16, 2004: Extreme Measures

I finally opened a forward from my sister Rose. I am not fond of
forwarding email, because it leads to unnecessary e-box clutter:
however, this one was innovative enough to make it part of today's
writing prompt. This is the forwarded email:

In a message dated 4/4/2004 12:42:04 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
PuttPutt5 writes:

An elderly man in Phoenix calls his son in New York and says, "I
hate to ruin your day, but I have to tell you that your mother and I
are divorcing. Forty-five years of misery is enough." "Pop, what are
you talking about?" the son screams. We can't stand the sight of
each other any longer," the old man says. "We're sick of each
other, and I'm sick of talking about this, so you call your sister
in Chicago and tell her," and he hangs up. Frantic, the son calls
his sister, who explodes on the phone, "Like heck they're getting
divorced," she shouts, "I'll take care of this." She calls her
father immediately and screams at the old man, "You are NOT getting
divorced! Don't do a single thing until I get there. I'm calling my
brother back, and we'll both be there tomorrow. Until then, don't do
a thing, DO YOU HEAR ME?" and hangs up. The old man hangs up his
phone and turns to his wife. "Okay," he says "They're coming for
Passover and paying their own airfares."

Silly, yes, but it worked within the context of the flash. It's a
story in and of itself, as well as a joke with a punch line, or
payoff.

This leads to the prompt. Has your character ever gone to such
extreme measures to accomplish something like the father did in this
piece? Would he or she? Try to think of something, some goal to be
accomplished, and then think of the zaniest resolution that your
character could apply to it.

Write on!


Subject: Prompt for Thu Apr 15, 2004 10:43 am: Chaos

What is the most chaotic scenario you can imagine for your
character? Are they space adventurers, afraid of spiders, on a
planet with intelligent and rational arachnid societies, perhaps as
ambassadors for the human race? Is it something as simple as 'for
want of a nail...'? Have some fun with it, whether or not you play
off your character's fears or un-preparedness--and if it involves
some aspect of the character's persona, so much the better.

(With luck, I'll post more regularly again--finally, a local access
number! LOL!)



Yet Another Irregular Writing Prompt

Again, apologies. We're moving this week, signing the lease tomorrow,
enrolling Terror in a new school and all that rot. AT&T will not turn on the
telephone until Tuesday (if they actually do turn it on, that is), so I might not get
to post another prompt for a little while. I still want to check on DSL too,
which would mean we could have a household wireless network and I would not
have to worry about begging computer time from my daughter any more. ;-)

There are many types of moves: changes in residence, school, emotional
state, from culture to culture, country to country. There are moves or shifts in
attitude, circumstance, or thought. Why not write a piece about a particular
move of your own, or of your character? (I refuse to think about a bowel
"move"-ment, but sometimes they can have a serious and profound effect too--or
some such. This time, I'm thinking about when my brother in law passed or moved a
gallstone while he was in the hospital. The little bugger had been vexing him and
they were getting him ready for surgery to remove it; but when it moved out of
his system, that meant he didn't need them to cut him open and take it out.
=})



: Today's Writing Prompt: Time

Hi! I'm not going to make any excuses and just state the facts. The phone
company turned off my telephone 10 days before they should have (on the fifth,
rather than the 15th, which was the day we were supposed to move, which also
meant that we lost the first apartment we were supposed to move to), and we're
moving one week from today. We've packed some things, but there never seems to
be enough time to get packing, writing, or sometimes even breathing done. ;-)
How do you. how does your character, cope with a time crunch? This goes for the
times that they have to make split-second decisions, too.

They do say that 'timing is everything', after all....


Subject: Writing Prompts for The Weekend



It seems I'm going to be all weekend, so I'm going to post three
short prompts and I hope that's okay. My sister is coming out for the weekend and
she didn't give us permission to use the computer inside the house. She's the
executor, so...

1. We all manage to get specific idea for characters sometimes, and from the
oddest sources. For example, in one story still in the process of generation,
I have a character that I had originally intended to kill off towards the end
of the novel. I looked for a good-sounding, descriptive word in the
dictionary, and settled on sepulchre, which is a type of tomb. I thought it would be a
little too silly to give a character that sort of name, so I altered it to
Sepelio. He's not a primary character, but a secondary one who plays a helper role
(albeit an important one) to another character. The way the character
developed, he's not going to die after all, but the name remains the same be
cause it sounds good, doesn't it? You may have an idea for a character type
but lack a name for him or her; if you have an idea from a personality trait or
from an intended destiny, take this opportunity to look in the dictionary for
some basic naming ideas. You don't have to restrict the words to English. Do
a little exploring before you decide on a name and on whether or not to alter
the word for your designs. How do you see this person? How tall, hair color,
habits, hobbies and interests, background, these kinds of things can be
important enough to play a role in their characterization. With luck, it shouldn't
take too long; you already had a specific characterization goal in mind while
naming the character.

2. Take the character that you created and write a scene with them in it.
Maybe you can have them in a coffee shop with some character or person that you,
yourself, have always wanted to meet. Keeping the persona of your character in
mind, and writing the other character or person in what you interpret as his
or her character, perhaps you can have them talking about who's going to pick
up the check, or some other dilemma. Pick a specific goal for the scene and
keep that in mind while you're writing it. Is your character hiring, or for
hire? Will someone excuse themselves to go to the bathroom and bail on the bill?
Would they fight each other, armed or unarmed, and the loser pay the bill? Will
they decide to split the bill? Will they both skip out before paying the bill?
Will they agree to meet on another occasion? You decide what the beginning and
the end of that scene will be, and on who your viewpoint character is, and
just write it straight through. Don't worry about making 'misteaks' in spelling,
since you're the only one reading it. ;-) Just report on it the way you see
it happening from your viewpoint character's perspective.

3. Write the same scene, only from the other character's perspective. Don't
worry about referring to the other scene to get facts in order, just write the
same basic thing straight through from the other character's viewpoint. (Yes,
this can be done in stanzas and lines too.) You can compare the two versions
afterwards and see how each one looks to you, perhaps which one you like
better.

The important thing there is the act of writing, but the process may give you
ideas for a story or three. Have fun with it, and don't be afraid to play
with it.



Subject: Prompt for 4 March 2004: Diary of a Madman/woman

This can be written either from your own perspective or the angle of your
character. Lots of things drive us a bit crazy. What do you think would drive you
or your character off thje deep end? Just for fun, write it up; you never
know when some part of it may be helpful, one day.


Subject: Random Prompt for Wednesday 3 March 2003: Plot & Character

Maybe I'll get better about posting prompts once we're finished moving. ;-)
Speaking of moving... Transitions in a character's life can be important when
it comes to writing a short story or novel; for the former, the character's
transition can be the tale. Whether it's a new job, a move, an abrupt
transition from one plane of existence to the next, put your character through a major
change. Whatever it is, I leave to you. Bring forward a member of the Spanish
Inquisition to the 21st century, possibly a church. Differences in language,
even though they might both speak the same basic one, could lead to some
confusion because of alterations in context and connotation. Even more confusing
might be a samurai from 500 years ago brought forth to present day Manhattan or
a Wall Street broker sent back to feudal Japan. Then again, could you
imagine one of the pilgrims having to deal with telemarketers? How would one react
to the 'magic' of a telephone or a television? There are other transitions
oyu could try, not just time-traveling ones. I've put them forth as major
examples of transitions. It could be as subtle as a petal or two falling from a
wilted flower (with or without a person pondering it who may have suffered loss in
his or her own life and trying to deal with it). It could be just about
anything. I'll let you decide, since you'd be the author. Liz.


Subject: Writing Prompt for Saturday 21 February 2004: Imagery

What we write can be inspired by physical surroundings. What we perceive is
often shadowed or colored by our mood. A dark room can seem like heaven or
hell, depending on the way you feel at the time.

I'm assuming that you have a story that you're working on--if you don't then
just grab a piece of paper and write something. ;-)

First, decide on a mood. How does your character feel, what is your
character's emotional state? If you don't have a location for the scene picked out or
anything, then you can use your kitchen or whatever passes for it. If you're
angry or upset, how do things look to you? What do you notice? If you're
confused, befuddled, bewildered... Pick a feeling, then try to place yourself in that
feeling and write things the way that your character would see them. More
goes into this then you think: this is where some of your character's interests
come into play. If they like to paint in their spare time they may use painting
analogies. If they write poetry, then poetic imagery. If they like racing
cars... Well, you get the general idea.

This isn't just a good way to display character, but also to describe
surroundings in your story. It's a way of interacting with your environment.



Subject: Prompt for Friday 20 February 2004: Fun and Games?

This, I can't help--it was on THE PARASITORIUM, another Yahoo list I belong
to, and they were having a discussion of a book of a collection of short
stories. Apparently, from what I gather, the book is either by Stephen King, or it
begins and ends with Stephen King. A story in it (or the book itself) is called
999, though the book is 666 pages. I mentioned that 999 was supposedly the
beast's intelligence (666 being the Beast), and someone said that 668 was the
neighbor of the beast. Of course, someone else mentioned that 669 was the number
for the Beast's sex life....

Other than beastly jokes, pick one of your favorite (or least favorite)
topics nd see how many jokes you can generate which relate to it: and remember, 333
is the Beast's scion, LOL.


Subject: Prompt for Thursday 19 February 2004: Once Upon A Time...

Write a parody of a fairy tale. Take, for instance, the
three bears, where you could have (after the main action of the story) the
woodcutter in Little Red Riding Hood hauled into court for stalking Little Red
Riding Hood, or having Goldilocks prosecuted for breaking and entering or for
trespassing. You can even tweak fairy tales by combining them, like mixing
Princess and the Pea with Sleeping Beauty.

Above all, try to have fun with it. Maybe there's even a twist on a fairy
tale that you would have liked to have seen, or an urban legend that you would
like to shuffle around a bit.



Subject: Prompt for Tuesday 17 February 2004

First, remember--it's only one month until St Patrick's Day. ;-)

Speaking of snakes, that's going to be the prompt today. Snakes Have fun with
it, it's open to several hundred interpretations, from erotic to catatonic.
There was a movie by that title. Medusa had snakes for hair. Plumbers use what
they call a snake to unclog a toilet. We call a conniver of some sort a
"snake in the grass". There are so many different interpretations of the word
snake, a lot more than I can list in this one email, so decide on something to
write, and have fun with it.



Subject: Writing Prompt for Monday 16 February 2004: What Is A Story?

Well, maybe the prompt title is a little misleading: it should be "What is a
story that you would like to tell". I want you to sit down and write a
paragraph with five sentences.

In the first sentence, I want you to write down who the story is about--the
name and the goal (want) of your protagonist. (Subsequent to this will be the
list of characteristics--who this person is, what they look like, how they act,
mannerisms, but that will be at your own leisure]).

In the second sentence, you need to consider the first obstacle. In the
third, a worse obstacle, perhaps even the worst obstacle for your protagonist to
overcome. In the fourth, think of a way they can overcome this obstacle.

The fifth sentence is the denouement, or the outcome of your protagonist's
success or failure in the course of this venture.

This is the most basic of outlines. The story itself can be written as either
poem or prose (Hi, John!). In a lot of writing books, they recommend three
obstacles; but in flash fiction, you can get away with the minimum in order to
serve your purpose (in this case, just writing something).

Since I mentioned that a lot of this is done with flash fiction, here's a
link to a diagram/website, Writing Flash Fiction Using Bubble Diagrams. A lot of
flash, or five minute, or postcard, or whatever you want to call it fiction
can turn into books in the long run, even a series of books. Trust me, I
know--I'm still working on one that began as a 500-word flash for one writer's group.
I've finally decided where and when the darn story’s supposed to start, I
already have to many notes and the like on it. *grin*. I have a 5000 word story
that began its life as a 450 word 'flash', too.

Flash fiction is a good tool for outlining a larger work, but the outline in
its most basic form gives a hard diagram for the storyline that you van work
with. The five sentence thing in itself is flexible enough to give you a firm
foundation to build on, and it's easy to write or type it to an index card and
put it by your computer for reference while you write, to remind yourself of
your writing goal for a specific story, whether short or novel length.

Subject: Writing Prompt for 15 February 2004: The Aftermath

Hi there! It's time for post-Valentine's stress syndrome prompts. Write something about 'the morning after', whether it's romantic or otherwise. Usually I'd say 'the morning after' something terrible, but if you're not in the mood, then make it a happy scene, just so long as you 'write on'.