mbarker: (Burp)
[personal profile] mbarker
 Original Posting: March 19, 2019

Here we go. Pick a number from... oh, let's say five to fifteen. Okay? Any number you like from five to fifteen.Next, pop over to https://www.reddit.com/r/WritingPrompts/ and you will find a lengthy list of writing prompts. BUT don't get distracted. Instead, Just skip the Wildcard or other stuff at the top, and start counting Writing Prompt entries. One, two... when you get to your choice, stop! Read that writing prompt.Now. Whether you like it or not, go ahead and write something about it. GO FOR IT!There you go. Write, write, write!
mbarker: (BrainUnderRepair)
[personal profile] mbarker
Original posting March 1, 2019

(Let's see... start writing this weekend, and aim at Sunday, March 10 as the deadline for the first 6x6 tale? Sounds good to me!)

I have a random generator that basically cranks out a character, a problem, a genre, a scruple, an RPG plot, and a oddball element (something in something). So I just ran it six times, and kind of put together the elements in a little prompt about the story. Feel free to use as much of it as is helpful, dropout pieces, change pieces, or whatever. But I thought I would provide you with some seeds to help in writing your short stories.

In a story about that old black magic wish fulfillment, a pilot who is having trouble with his/her boss sets out on a quest to break in and steal money in the living room. Along the way, he or she has to deal with the moral dilemma of knowing that a friend has a terminal illness, but the family has begged everyone to keep it from the patient. When the friend asks, will the pilot tell them the truth or not?

So, genre is old black magic wish fulfillment.
Character? A pilot.
Problem: trouble with his/her boss.
RPG plot: quest, break in and steal something.
Element: money in the living room.
Scruple: a friend has a terminal illness. The family has asked everyone to not tell the friend. The friend asks you about it. Do you tell them or not?

Lots of bits and pieces there that might spark something in your story telling soup. Have fun!
mbarker: (BrainUnderRepair)
[personal profile] mbarker
 Original post Oct. 22, 2018

Ho, ho, ho... I just put together a little random generator, using horror ideas, elements, devices, and locations from The Fiction Writer's Silent Partner. Let's try hitting it six times, and see what we get?

1.
Idea:  mysterious circus lures young victims to a performance
Element: abominable snowman
Device: flying monsters
Location: locked room

2.
Idea: an artist uses real people for his sculptures
Element: forces of energy
Device: hot wax
Location: a ghost boat

3.
Idea: a monster/wild animals/reptiles/rodents infest a village or town
Element: bats
Device: reptiles
Location: garage

4.
Idea: a train or other vehicle departs its route
Element: prehistoric monsters
Device: flying monsters
Location: locked room

5.
Idea: a scientist creates life or energy that goes out of control
Element: dragons
Device: gouging
Location: deserted warehouse

6.
Idea: an electrical field feeds on other energy, growing stronger and more deadly
Element: monsters
Device: hatchet
Location: deserted fun park

Well, they may not be the greatest, but… Perhaps they will provide you with a starting point? Tell us about the locked room in the circus, or perhaps the ghost boat, filled with sculptures that are eerily realistic? How about the wave of bats and reptiles taking over the town, trapping our heroes in a garage? Or maybe it's the locked room on the train, driven off of its tracks by flying prehistoric monsters? Or the dragons that the bio technicians thought they had under control, out in the warehouse? What about the electrical monsters growing in the deserted fun park?

Go ahead, make it your story!
[identity profile] mbarker.livejournal.com
Original Posting Feb. 12, 2016

Here's a simple one. I have a random prompt generator, and when I ran it today, it spewed out these little hints.

Problem: Offered a job.
Genre: Beyond the fields we know: life in a fantasy world.
Scruple: You are asked to support a moral position against your personal convictions. Do you?
Plot: Strange places. Getting there, new experiences, and come back or not?

There you go. Your main character (pick one!) has been offered a job. Perhaps they were fumbling around on the web, maybe they applied somewhere, that's up to you. But... Taking this job means taking a walk on the wild side, into a strange new world. Along the way, don't forget that they are going to be challenged with the demand to take a moral position that conflicts with their own personal convictions. Which one? You decide!

Write that story. Flash, short, epic... Up to you.
Write!
tink
[identity profile] mbarker.livejournal.com
Original Posting 22 Jan 2012

Okay. Quick ways to get an idea for your very own 6x6 story (or any other story, for that matter).

1. Dictionary!

Almost every online dictionary offers a "word of the day" which can be helpful. For example, over here http://dictionary.reference.com/ they were giving out remora when I wrote this (although the meaning -- an obstacle, hindrance, or obstruction? Wait, I thought a remora was a fish that went with a shark... later! :-) But one word doth not a story make, right? Well...

Go over here http://www.ypass.net/misc/dictionary/index.php?random=1 and you can get a random word. Refresh the page, and you get another one. Plus, you can select verbs and nouns, for example. So you might select a noun, a verb, and another noun -- filling out the pattern noun-verb-noun to make a sentence. E.g. I got "feather ball", "work", and "Norfolk jacket" so I might have a sentence like "The feather ball worked over the Norfolk jacket." Or maybe against? Anyway, you get the idea.

And best of all, http://www.thefreedictionary.com/Dictionary.htm gives you a list of several words, all at once! The start of the list I got was "city, driveway, now, sprint, read, daisy, surveillance, and doily" -- imagine trying to use those in a story? Or just take the five across the top -- homeland, liking, consult, holland, dish.

Anyway, random words from a dictionary sometimes can be the tinder where the fire starts. So pick your words and link them up!

2. Pictures. Nope, dictionaries aren't going to do it? How about pictures? If you google "random pictures" there are sites out there devoted to just this! Although most of them seem to be aimed at funny pictures. Or you could toss something into the google image search and see what you find there. Take a look at CNN -- the Daily Snapshop over here
http://edition.cnn.com/2011/12/06/travel/daily-snapshot/index.html?hpt=hp_bn3 which is actually 7 pictures -- pick one, and tell us what's going on there.

3. Jokes. Oh, did you hear the one about... Yipes! I did a search for jokes, and everybody and their brother seems to have a joke list. However, the first ones I looked at... well, maybe my idea of humor isn't quite what they have? Anyway, yes, if you can find a list of jokes that makes you laugh, you might consider using that as a seed for a story! Just don't yuck it up, okay?

4. Urban Legends. Our friend Snopes over here http://www.snopes.com/ has more urban legends than anyone could read. But hit the randomizer, or the Hot 25, and see if you get inspired. What if... there was some truth in that legend?

5. Plots. Take a look at 20 Master Plots (psst? Try this list, if you like http://writercises.livejournal.com/47510.html ). Or any of the other wonderful lists of plots -- quest, revenge, love, adenture, one against the odds? Or do you prefer journey and return, betrayal and revenge, boy meets girl, overcoming opposition, rescuing the victim, overcoming monsters, finding treasure, sin and redemption, impersonation, comdey, and come to realize? Or... pick a framework or list of plots, and consider doing one. Or part of one? Now, add characters and setting, and write!

6. Quotes. This will take some work. First, go somewhere like http://www.quotationspage.com/random.php3 and take a look at a collection of say 10 random quotes. Pick 3. Now, write your story around those philosophical concepts, those jokes in wordy disguise, those realizations. The hard part here is that random quotes, while typically amusing and witty, often don't exactly suggest characters, scenes, actions, and all that directly. So you will have to work a bit more to wring the story out of the quotes, but... You can do it!

Okay? Some seeds to sprinkle into your 6x6 garden. Then urge them to grow!

and WRITE!
[identity profile] mbarker.livejournal.com
Original posting Nov. 4, 2010

Ha! Here's a fun little teaser, if you're having trouble figuring out what to write about for nanowrimo (hey, it could happen, right?).

First, go over to http://tvtropes.org/ -- but DO NOT START BROWSING, because it's way too easy to spend hours here without any words. Instead, click on random (top right hand button). That will give you some kind of weird trope from the troves, with which you should...

Second, consider how this might apply to your characters, scenes, etc. Go ahead and sketch up at least one scene using this trope. Or if you happen to get a series or something, scramble through it and pick out something to use for your story. And write, write, write...

Go!

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