2024-03-08

mbarker: (ISeeYou2)
[personal profile] mbarker2024-03-08 04:20 pm

EXERCISE: Halloween Themes? (Replay!)

Repost Date October 10,.2020
Original posting: Sunday, September 30, 2018 8:43 PM

Since you are probably hard at work on those Halloween stories and poems for the contest, let’s see what we can find...

Okay, let's start with this list... 22 party themes, but they could be story themes, too.

https://www.care.com/c/stories/3709/22-halloween-party-themes/

1. Monster Mash
2. Willy Wonka
3. Haunted house
4. Autumn harvest
5. Carnival
6. Murder mystery
7. Freak show
8. Mad scientist
9. Jack-o'-lantern carving
10. Superheroes
11. Graveyard
12. Alice in Wonderland
13. Hollywood
14. Edgar Allan Poe
15. Harry Potter
16. Rocky Horror Picture Show
17. Politicians
18. Pirates
19. UFO
20. Zombies
21. The mummy's curse
22. Gothic

Not quite what you were looking for? How about these 8 uncommon Halloween party themes?

https://www.greenvelope.com/blog/eight-uncommon-halloween-party-themes

1. Creepy Crawly
2. Crime scene
3. A speakeasy
4. Spells and potions
5. Ghouls night in
6. Full moon halloween
7. Murder mystery
8. Dia de los Muertos

Or poke around the web and find a Halloween theme of your own! After all, I know you have the heart of a little boy, in a jar on your desk…
mbarker: (Burp)
[personal profile] mbarker2024-03-08 04:24 pm
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TECH: Writing a Horror Story... (replay!)

 Reposted 10/8/2020

[Be careful, sometimes links don't age gracefully...]
Original posting: Thursday, October 4, 2018 12:28 PM

Out of idle curiosity (and knowing that the Halloween contest is about to start roaring – short stories up to 5000 words and poetry up to you!), I did a Google search for "writing a horror story". Let's see…

1. How to Write a Horror Story - 6 Terrific Tips

https://www.nownovel.com/blog/how-to-write-horror-story-tips/

A blog posting. Common elements of horror stories… Malevolent or wicked characters, deeds or phenomena, arouse feelings of fear, shock, disgust and the sense of the uncanny, intense, scary or shocking scintillating plot twists and reveals, and they immerse readers in the macabre.

The tips? Use a strong, pervasive tone. Read widely in the genre. Give wicked characters better, credible motivations. Use the core elements of tragedy. Tap into common human fears. Learn the difference between terror and horror.

Lots of good advice! Go read it.

2. How to Write a Horror Story (With Sample Stories)

https://www.wikihow.com/Write-a-Horror-Story

Step-by-step instructions! Be aware of the subjective nature of horror. Read several different types of horror stories. Analyze the examples. Generate story ideas by thinking about what scares you or revolts you. (Watch out, clicking here will do interesting things. A drop down to help you with brainstorming?) Take an ordinary situation and make it horrifying. Use setting to limit or trap your characters. Let your characters trap themselves. Create extreme emotions and your readers. Use horrifying details. Create a plot outline. Develop the characters. And so on…

Wow! Again, lots of good stuff there.

3. So Good It's Scary: How to Write a Horror Story - IngramSpark

https://www.ingramspark.com/blog/so-good-its-scary-how-to-write-a-horror-story

Another blog entry for the fun of it...

4. How to Write a Horror Story, Writing Horror

http://www.writersdigest.com/writing-articles/by-writing-genre/horror-by-writing-genre

All right, Writer's Digest! A collection of columns to help you "learn how to chill the blood and raise goosebumps with a great horror story."

5. Google offered me a set of videos, too. We'll skip lightly past that, but if you like your lessons on video, take a look.

6. A Guide to How to Write a Horror Story – A Research Guide for Students

https://www.aresearchguide.com/write-a-horror-story.html

Step-by-step, here comes a horror story…

7. 10 Chilling Writing Tips From Horror Authors

https://www.bustle.com/p/10-chilling-writing-tips-from-horror-authors-2363863

How to make your word genuinely scary? Spine chilling nightmare fuel…

8. Write a Horror Story/So You Want to

And here's TV tropes! Don't get lost, but you might want to take a look at it.

https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/SoYouWantTo/WriteAHorrorStory

They always have plenty of helpful material, as long as you don't get lost following all the possible connections. I recommend setting a timer to keep yourself under control.

9. How to Write a Horror Story: Short horror stories

Tobias Wade! Another blog

https://tobiaswade.com/how-to-write-a-horror-story/him

Mystery, suspense, climax, twist… A little bit of advice to help you

10. How to Write a Horror Story: 11 steps

https://www.instructables.com/id/How-to-Write-a-Horror-Story-2/

Aha! Another step-by-step guide.

Oh... if you change the search string to "how to write a horror story" suddenly you get a slightly different set of results, including the information that there are about 162,000,000 results.

What fun! But remember, when all the guides have been perused and set aside, you still have to…

Write!
mbarker: (BrainUnderRepair)
[personal profile] mbarker2024-03-08 04:28 pm

TECH: Save The Cat Meets Nanowrimo (Replay!)

 Reposted 10/30/2020

Posted Saturday, October 29, 2016 7:15 PM

(You may think you saw this before! You're right! It's deja vu all over again! Still, I think it might be helpful as we rev up for nanowrimo!)

All right. Nanowrimo is just around the corner, but we've still got a couple of days to get prepared. And looking at the book Save the Cat! By Blake Snyder, I think we can get some pointers.

After all, Blake starts out in chapter 1 talking about the logline. The one line answer to the question what's it about. What's the heart of the story? In particular, you need to include four components.

The first one is what Blake calls irony, or the hook. Something unexpected, emotionally intriguing, something that makes you want to read that story.

The second one is a compelling mental picture. Something that sparks our imagination.

The third one is the one that you may not think you need. A good logline for the movie industry suggests who the audience is and how much it's going to cost. For your story, you probably want to think about the audience. Cost… Well, how big is this story?

Fourth, and final, a really good logline usually includes a killer title. Not generic, the headline of a specific story.

So spend a little time figuring out what your story's going to be about. You need some ideas?

1. Switcheroo -- take a dramatic, thriller, or horror story and make it a comedy. Or, take a comedy story and turn it into a dramatic, thriller, or horror story. Switch those genres, and see what happens!

2. Fish out of water -- name five places that no one would send an FBI agent to solve a crime, and then send an FBI agent there. Private eye, secret agent, teenager -- take a character and put them somewhere unexpected.

3. What kind of a school? Name five examples of unusual kinds of schools, camps, classrooms. What happens when someone tries to put your students in that school?

4. Opposites attract? Take a couple of people who would naturally be on opposite sides of a burning issue, and get them together.

5. Are you after me? Pick an unusual person, animal, or thing that someone might suspect of being a serial killer, murderer, arsonist, or something else. Why did your character suspect them? And what is your character going to do about it?

Psst? Let me toss in that Marion Zimmer Bradley said a good story is

1. A likable character
2. Overcomes almost insuperable odds (opposition, conflict!)
3. By his or her own efforts
4. Achieving a worthwhile goal.

I kind of think that filling in those four parts also makes a pretty good statement about what your story is.

All right. Once you've got your idea, your logline, you probably need to think about the genre. Maybe you already did, but take a minute and figure out which of these "standard" stories you're telling. It'll help you to figure out what needs to go into it.

1. Monster in the house -- there's some limited area, and a monster is loose in it.
2. The Golden fleece -- a quest by any other name.
3. Out of the bottle -- wish fulfillment.
4. Dude with a problem -- an ordinary guy in extraordinary circumstances.
5. Rites of passage -- change of life.
6. Buddy love -- two people. Odd couple, starcrossed lovers, all kinds of two-somes.
7. Whydunit -- a mystery!
8. The fool triumphant -- when the clown wins, we all cheer.
9. Institutionalized -- the system or the individual?
10. Superhero -- the extraordinary guy in ordinary circumstances.

20 master plots, these 10 genres, add in your own favorites. Right now cross genre mash ups seem to be popular, so if you really want to do a steam punk
romance with vampires, go for it. But whatever it is, figure out the general type of story.

Now, with your idea and genre in hand, Blake suggests you focus on whom it's about. Who is the hero? What do they want? Who is going to have the most conflict, the longest and hardest emotional journey, and a primal goal that we can all root for? Who can the readers identify with, learn from, be compelled to follow, believe deserves to win, and has a primal reason that the readers will buy? What's the key to your good guy and your bad guy?

Idea, genre, characters. The next step is where Blake recommends a 15 step pattern. His very own beats. Some people use the hero's journey, other people use three act structure, or a seven step story structure. One way or another, a lot of people recommend hanging your story on a standard scaffold.

Blake Snyder's 15 Beats
1. Opening image
2. Statement of the theme
3. Set up -- who are the characters, and what's the hero missing?
4. Catalyst -- What kicks off the action?
5. Debate -- wait a minute?
6. Break into act two -- The hero takes that step
7. The B story -- changeup
8. Fun and games -- let's try it out
9. Midpoint -- raise the stakes, hit a false victory
10. The bad guys close in
11. All is lost! The mentor dies, friends turn away
12. The dark night of the soul.
13. The break into act three. Aha! There is hope!
14. The finale. The climax. The hero wins.
15. The final image

You can find the hero's journey or the seven step story structure out there on the web. Briefly, the hero's journey looks like:

1. Ordinary world
2. Call to adventure
3. Refusal of the call
4. Meeting the mentor
5. Crossing the first threshold
6. Tests, allies, enemies
7. Approach to the inmost cave
8. Supreme ordeal
9. Reward (seizing the sword)
10. The road back
11. Resurrection
12. Return with elixir

The seven step story structure is

1. Hook: where does the character start?
2. Plot turn one: what is the call to action?
3. Pinch one: what makes this difficult for the character?
4. Midpoint: when does the character quit reacting and start acting?
5. Pinch two: what makes this absolutely necessary for the character?
6. Plot turn two: what is the final bit of information, the aha! that lets the
character save the day?
7. Resolution or climax: where does the character end? Do they save the day, or
lose it all?

Heck, here's a quickie 3 act, 2 door version:

1. Inciting incident
2. The first door of no return
3. Conflicts and complications
4. The second door of no return
5. The climax

The key to all of these is realizing that they are suggesting some key steps in the plot, some scenes that almost always are there. Show where the character is starting, and what kicks them out of that. Make them struggle, and then... take the first step! Now, in the middle, there should be tests, struggles, conflicts, leading up to... taking the second step! And, now, we have the climax, the point of the whole thing.

But aren't there more than (seven, 12, 15) scenes? Of course there. Blake suggests that most movies have about 40. So you need to add more scenes around
and between the key ones. This is where Blake suggests using a cork board, index cards, and pushpins. But you can also do this on paper. A lot of people simply write one sentence for each scene, and move them around as needed. I used to recommend "stepping stone" diagrams. Put your beginning at the top of the page, and your ending at the bottom, then put bubbles in between with a
phrase for each scene. This works reasonably well for short stories, but for longer works, the page is likely to get pretty crowded. Whatever works for you.

Blake does suggest an interesting structure for his cards. He starts off with the setting, where are we. Under this is the basic action of the scene in simple sentences. Characters in conflict, mostly. And at the very bottom,
there's a plus/minus which is where you write the emotional change that occurs in the scene. The other one is >< and beside that you should write the conflict, what someone wants, and what's blocking them.

You might also want to think about scene and sequel, the idea that we have a scene full of action followed by a sequel where the character reacts, analyzes, thinks about what to do next, and makes a decision.

Idea, genre, characters, broadbrush outline, and a list of scenes, with setting, action, emotional change, and conflict? Hey, if you have all that...

YOU'RE READY TO WRITE!

Psst? I'll write something later about brainstorming before writing scenes. For right now, just get your scenes in order!

Nanowrimo, here we come!
mbarker: (BrainUnderRepair)
[personal profile] mbarker2024-03-08 04:34 pm

EXERCISE: Thank You for Thanksgiving!

 Original posting 11/20/2020

Hey, y'all. On Facebook, I've noticed people challenging each other to give thanks. That's right, think about things in your life that you are thankful for, and say thank you!

Which, of course, could be expanded into a whole little exercise. I mean, there's probably lots of things you are thankful for, and people, and situations, and... hey, you might even want to write a little story, poem, or something about being thankful?

I mean, that old Thanksgiving story of the Pilgrims and the Indians is lots of fun, but maybe you've got another story? About that time when... 

Tell us about a time when you were thankful, or maybe still are thankful? Put us in that setting, make us feel the tension, and the release, and that burst of thanksgiving feeling?

For example...

I remember one fall trip to Ohio, long ago, when we were sitting at the back of the traffic stopped near Wheeling, West Virginia (if I remember correctly). It was two lines of traffic, coming down a long, long slope, curving behind us. My father looked in the mirror, and made some kind of noise. We all looked back, and saw a big truck, barreling full speed down that hill. His brakes had failed. We were right in the path, with nowhere to go.

Then the trucker did the smart thing. He turned, across the median, which was a big drop at that point, and flew across and bounced down the empty lanes on the other side. I have no idea what happened when he hit the little town that lay ahead, or whether he managed to slow down somewhere along the way.

But our family said a big thank you that day, for one smart trucker who took the risk of jumping that truck across instead of just smashing into the cars sitting there.

There you go! So what is your story about being thankful, about giving thanks?