[identity profile] mbarker.livejournal.com
Original Posting 5 April 2012

Writer's Digest, December 1990, pages 24, 26 and 27, have an article by Thomas Clark with the title, "How to Get Started As a Writer." I'm going to skip lightly by his advice to set aside an area where you can write, act like a writer, collect the tools a writer needs, read them, put words on paper, write every day, decide what type of writer you want to be, think small, put your work in the mail, and expect to be rejected. But he also included five short writing assignments that I thought you might want to try.

A character sketch. Write a few pages about a character you'd like to use in a short story or novel. Who is this person? What does she want from life? Who is keeping her from it? What does she look like? How does she spend her days? Write until you feel you've known this person for years.

An overheard conversation. Eavesdrop on a conversation at the office, in the grocery, or at the health club, then come home and recreate it on paper. Write until the dialogue reads like people talk.

A probing journal entry. Use your private book to explore an ethical dilemma, ponder a philosophical gray area, or justify a questionable action. Dig deep and stretch your ability to translate thoughts into words.

A letter to an out-of-town relative. Describe something or someone the relative has never seen -- a new house, for instance, or a newborn child. Offer as complete a portrait as you can.

A rewritten scene. Pick a section from a book you thought was poorly written and rewrite it. Change whatever you want to create an improved version that still serves the book's overall purpose.

There you go. Character, dialogue, idea, description, or scene. Take your pick, and write!
[identity profile] mbarker.livejournal.com
Original posting 1 April 2009

No Return Address?

Writer's Digest, December 2007, page 15, offers this writing prompt:
"You receive a letter addressed to the former owner of your house. As you're writing "return to sender" on the envelope, you realize there's no return address. Feeling bold, you decide to open it. Inside you find a love letter. What does it say? And what do you do?"
Isn't there a rock song about return to sender? Address unknown, no such person,...

Anyway, there's the problem. A letter gone astray. What does it say? How will you play? And lots of other "ay" words.

For a variation, you might consider some other contents. Death threat, notification of a legacy, maybe even a map to adventure? Guess who's coming to visit?

Inciting incidents can be so much fun.

And now, it's your turn to write! Do it!

Fireworks at midnight, anyone?

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