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Ignite the Creative Writing Process

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Ignite the Creative Writing Process

Most writers at some point will come face to face with their nemesis: the dreaded blank page. The exercises below, which tap memory, observation, and imagination, aim to help you push past that daunting void and get the words flowing.

Recommended Creative Writing ā€œJump Startā€ Exercises

  • 1. Practice awareness of the world around you

    Go to a restaurant or coffee shop (or another busy place) and take notes about it, focusing on sensory details. What are you seeing, smelling, tasting, hearing, and touching? Try to incorporate everything.

  • 2. Dive into a Photograph

    Find a random photo of a person in a magazine or newspaper. Imagine this person’s life. Create a detailed inventory of what is in this person’s bedroom, refrigerator, and medicine cabinet. Then, write a personal ad as if you were this person.

  • 3. Look for Odd Stories in the News

    Troll news sites and social media for odd stories. Try writing a scene that involves some aspect of the person, place, or action, inventing the details as you go.

  • 4. Find a story seed in the ā€œPersonalsā€ section

    Go to the Personals sections of a newsweekly or Craigslist (the subhead ā€œMissed Connectionsā€ is good). Write a scene or poem based on an encounter/potential encounter, making up the details you need.

  • 5. It’s about Time: Try a ā€˜short’ time-bound story

    (¹ó°ł“dz¾ĢżWhat If?Ā p. 267; full citation below): Try writing a story that takes place in a short unit of time – 60 seconds, an hour, a day.

    Make a list of things that can be done in a short period (e.g. washing a dog/car/hair, stealing something…). Limit the story’s action to that time frame.

  • 6. Start with a Given First Line

    Here are a few to try (fromĀ What If?, p. 21-24):

    • Where were you last night?
    • I met him/her on the stairs.
    • The neighbors were at it again.
    • I haven’t been the same since__________
    • The first time I (or Name) heard SPECIFIC SONG, I (Name) was down/up/over at PLACE and we were doing ACTION.
  • 7. Start with a Title

    Try one of these (or make one up of your own):Ā People I’ve Kissed.ĢżThe House on Deacon Street.ĢżSunday.ĢżThe Road to Nowhere.ĢżDinner.ĢżThings to Do in 60 Seconds or Less.

  • 8. Watch a Favorite Film

    Pay attention to notable scenes, or ā€œmoments of fire,ā€ within the film. Then re-create one of those scenes in writing.

  • 9. Begin with a Space

    Recall a building in which you once lived. Map out this building on a sheet of paper. Consider all of the rooms and spaces and think about the ā€œhot spotā€ – the room that stands out the most to you. Describe that room and/or write a scene that takes place there.

  • 10. Your Start Might Be In the Cards

    Get some color-coded index cards or scraps of paper. On one color, write a random selection of characters (e.g. butcher, baker, candlestick maker). On another color, write a random selection of incidents (e.g. hits dog
    with car, bakes bread for dying friend, sets fire to trashcan.) Mix up the cards and pick a few at random. Then choose which combination appeals the most. Start a scene or poem using those two (or three) elements.

Recommended Resources

Bernays, Anne, and Pamela Painter.ĢżWhat If? Writing Exercises for Fiction Writers. College Edition. New York: Pearson Longman, 2004.

Kowitt, Steve.ĢżIn the Palm of Your Hand: The Poet’s Portable Workshop. Gardiner: Tilbury, 1995.

Lamott, Anne.Ā Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life. New York: Anchor, 1994.

Scofield, Sandra.ĢżThe Scene Book: A Primer for the Fiction Writer. New York: Penguin, 2007.

Stern, Jerome.Ā Making Shapely Fiction. New York: Laurel, 1991.

Original composed: 06/2008 |Ā Adapted and revised for web delivery: 07/2021

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