Creative Writing Exercises
Creative writing: Examples of story written by pupil
In her creative
writing workshops British author Clare Wigfall read out the really short story
„Safe“ as an example of a dystopian story, meaning a story which takes place in
a really undesirable (negative) future society.
The pupils were
taught how to start writing a (dystopian) story – so here are some examples of
creative texts, introductions as well as finished stories
It was the day everything fell into ruin
It was the day
I met him, like everyone did this day. It was a meeting I never had expected. I
thought him being far away.
It was the day
everything fell into ruin.
I had no idea
about the date we had; however I knew, I would never forget this day. You lose
your sense of time, when your whole world stops moving.
I wrapped my
hand around the stick, hoping it would protect me.
I wanted to
cry, I wanted to scream but my throat was empty. I wanted to turn my back, I
didn’t want to see anymore. I wished darkness before my closed, teary eyes;
such a comfortable view. Monochrome and silent. No red of burning flames or
blood. No desperate screams of people crying for help.
My black,
silent world. But my eyes widened even more. Standing on a hill I could see it.
I could see everything and I wasn’t able to take my eyes from it. I saw it
falling into ruin.
Brick by brick.
Burning to ash.
Though I stood
so far away from it, the fire burned my eyes.
I never thought
I would meet him – not at my age of twelve.
And I never
knew that he would come that fast and so close.
But now, he was
here, stealing lights away. He was everywhere. In the town and even one step
behind me.
The person you
are never pleased to meet.
The person called “Death“.
10 General Short Story Ideas
Our first batch of story ideas are for any kind
of story, whether a spy thriller or a memoir of your personal life. These 10 short story ideas are posted in more detail
here.
1.
2.
1 Tell the story of a
scar, whether a physical scar or emotional one. To
be a writer, said Stephen King, “The only requirement is the ability to remember every scar.”
3.
4.
5.
2 A group of children discover a dead body. Good
writers don’t turn away from death, which is, after
all, the universal human
experience. Instead, they look it directly into its dark face and describe what
they see on the page.
6.
7.
3 A young prodigy becomes orphaned. Orphans are uniquely vulnerable, and as such, they have the
most potential for growth.
8.
9. 4 A middle-aged
woman discovers a ghost. What do
Edgar Allen Poe, Ron Weasley, King Saul from the Bible, Odysseus, and Ebeneezer
Scrooge have in common? They all encountered ghosts!
5
A woman who is deeply in love
is crushed when her fiancé breaks up with her. “In life every ending is just a new beginning,” says Dakota
Fanning’s character in Uptown
Girls.
6
A talented young
man’s deepest fear is holding his life back. Your character’s biggest fear is your story’s secret weapon.
Don’t run from it, write about it.
7
A poor young boy or
girl comes into an unexpected fortune. Not all fortunes are good. Sometimes discovering a fortune will
destroy your life.
8
A shy, young woman unexpectedly bumps into her soulmate (literally
bumps into him). In film, this
is called the “meet cute,” when the hero bumps into the heroine in the
hallway, knocking her books to the floor, and forcing them into conversation.
9
A long journey is interrupted by a disaster. Who hasn’t been longing to get to a destination only to be
delayed by something unexpected? This is the plot of Gravity, The
Odyssey, and even Lord of the Rings.
10 A young
couple run into the path of a psychopath. Monsters, whether people who do monstrous things or scaly beasts
or a monster of a natural disaster, reveal what’s really inside a person. Let
your character fall into the path of a monster and see how they handle
themselves.
50 Fantastic Creative Writing Exercises
How are
creative writing exercises different than writing prompts or story generators?
Good
question.
Creative
writing exercises are designed to teach a technique. They are highly specific,
more specific than creative writing prompts, and much more specific than story
generators.
Creative
writing exercises for adults are not designed to lead the writer into
crafting a full story, but are only designed to help them improve as
a writer in a narrow, specific category of writing skills.
I’ve
broken the exercises below into categories so you can choose what category of
skill you’d like to practice. Can you guess which category in this
list has the most prompts?
·
Senses
·
Dialogue
·
Objects
·
Emotions
·
Characters
If you
guessed characters, then you’re right. I think characters are the heart blood
of every story, and that a majority of any writing prompts or writing exercises
should focus on them.
But I
also think any of these will help you create a narrative, and a plot, and help
you generate all kinds of dialogue, whether for short stories or for novels.
These writing exercises are pretty much guaranteed to improve your writing
and eliminate writer’s block.
Enjoy
the five categories of writing exercises below, and happy writing!
Senses:
1.
Think of the most deafening sound you can imagine. Describe it in great detail,
and have your character hear it for the first time at the start of a story.
2. Have
a man cooking for a woman on a third date, and have her describe the aromas in
such loving and extended detail that she realizes that she’s in love with him.
3. Pick
a line from one of your favorite songs, and identify the main emotion. Now
write a character who is feeling that emotion and hears the song. Try to
describe the type of music in such a beautiful way that you will make the
reader yearn to hear the song as well.
4. Have
a character dine at a blind restaurant, a restaurant in pitch blackness where
all the servers are blind, and describe for a full paragraph how the
tablecloth, their clothing, and the hand of their dining partner feels
different in the darkness.
5.
Select a dish representative of a national cuisine, and have a character describe
it in such detail that the reader salivates and the personality of the
character is revealed.
Dialogue:
6.
Write a story entirely in dialogue, having one side of the conversation
unspoken [redacted]. Make sure the reader can guess at what the redacted parts
are by what the other character says.
7.
Describe two characters having a wordless conversation, communicating only
through gestures. Try to see how long you can keep the conversation going
without any words spoken, but end it with one of them saying a single word, and
the other one repeating the same word.
8. In a
public place from the last vacation you took, have two characters arguing,
but make it clear by the end of the argument that they’re not arguing
about what they’re really upset about.
9. Write
a scene composed mostly of dialogue with a child talking to a stranger.
Your mission is to show the child as heartbreakingly cute. At the same
time, avoid sentimentality.
10.
Have two character have a conversation with only a single word, creating emphasis
and context so that the word communicates different things each time it is
spoken. The prime example of this is in the television show “The Wire,” where
Jimmy and Bunk investigate a crime scene repeating only a single expletive.
Objects:
11.
Pick an object that is ugly, and create a character who finds it very
beautiful. Have the character describe the object in a way that convinces the
reader of its beauty. Now write a second version where you convince the reader
(through describing the object alone) that the character is mentally unstable.
12.
Write down five emotions on slips of paper and slip them into a hat. Now go
outside and find a tree. Draw one emotion from the hat, and try to describe
that tree from the perspective of a character feeling that emotion. (Don’t
mention the emotion in your writing — try to describe the tree so the reader
could guess the emotion).
13.
Describe a character’s bedroom in such a way that it tells us about a
person’s greatest fears and hopes.
14.
Root through your desk drawer until you find a strange object, an object that
would probably not be in other people’s drawers. Have a character who is
devastated to find this object, and tell the story of why this object
devastates them.
15. Go
to an art-based Pinterest page and find your favorite piece of art.
Now imagine a living room inspired by that flavor of artwork, and
show the room after a husband and wife have had the worst fight of their
marriage.
16.
Pick a simple object like a vase, a broom, or a light bulb, and write a scene
that makes the reader cry when they see the object.
Emotions:
17.
Make a list of the top five fears in your life. Write a character who is
forced to confront one of those fears.
18.
Write an entire page describing the exact emotions when you learned of a
happy or calamitous event in your life. Now try to condense that page into a
single searing sentence.
19.
Think about a time in your life when you felt shame. Now write a character in a
similar situation, trying to make it even more shameful.
20.
Write a paragraph with a character struggle with two conflicting emotions
simultaneously. For example, a character who learns of his father’s death and
feels both satisfaction and pain.
21.
Write a paragraph where a character starts in one emotional register, and
through a process of thought, completely evolves into a different emotion.
Characters:
22.
Create a minor character based upon someone you dislike. Now have your
main character encounter them and feel sympathy and empathy for them despite
their faults.
23.
Have a kooky character tell a story inside a pre-established form: an
instruction manual, traffic update, email exchange, weather report, text
message.
24.
Write about a character who does something they swore they would never do.
25.
Have a character who has memorized something (the names of positions in the
Kama Sutra, the entire book of Revelations) recite it while doing something
completely at odds with what they’re reciting. For instance, bench
pressing while reciting the emperors in a Chinese dynasty.
26.
Write a paragraph where a character does a simple action, like
turning on a light switch, and make the reader marvel at how strange and
odd it truly is.
27.
Have a couple fight while playing a board game. Have the fight be about
something related to the board game: fighting about money, have them play
monopoly. Fighting about politics, let them play chess.
28.
Write about two characters angry at each other, but have both of them
pretend the problems don’t exist. Instead, have them fight
passive-aggressively, through small, snide comments.
29.
Describe a character walking across an expanse field or lot and describe
how he walks. The reader should perfectly understand his
personality simply by the way you describe his walk.
30.
Write a first-person POV of a character under the influence of alcohol or
drugs, and try to make the prose as woozy and tipsy as the character.
31.
Describe the first time that a character realizes he is not as smart as he
thought.
32.
Describe an hour in the life character who has recently lost
their ability to do what they love most (a pianist who has severe
arthritis; a runner who became a quadriplegic).
33.
Write an argument where a husband or wife complains of a physical ailment, but
their spouse refuses to believe it’s real.
34.
Write a scene where a stranger stops your main character, saying that they know
them, and insisting your main character is someone they are not.
Describe exactly how this case of mistaken identity makes your character feel.
35.
Describe a small personality trait about a person you love, and make the
reader love them, too.
36.
Write a personality-revealing scene with a character inside a
public restroom. Do they press a thumb against the mirror to leave a subtle
mark? Do they write a plea for help on the inside of the stall door? Do they
brag about the size of what they’ve just dumped off?
37.
Give your character an extremely unusual response to a national tragedy like a
terrorist attack or natural disaster. Maybe have them be aware their
response is unusual, and try to cloak it from others, or have them be
completely unaware and display it without any self-consciousness.
38.
Have one of your main characters come up with an idea for a comic book, and
tell a close friend about the idea. What about this idea would surprise
the friend, upsetting what he thought he knew about your main character? Also,
what would the main character learn about himself from the comic book idea?
39.
Think of an illness someone you love has suffered from. How does your character
respond when someone close to them has this illness?
40.
Have your main character invent an extremely offensive idea for a
book, and show their personality faults through discussing it with others.
41.
Have your character write down a list considering how to respond
to their stalker.
42.
Write a scene where a man hits on a woman, and although the woman acts
repulsed and begs her friends to get him away from her, it becomes apparent
that she likes the attention.
43.
Write about a 20-something confronting his parents over their
disapproval of his lifestyle.
44.
Have your character write a funny to-do list about the steps to
get a boyfriend or girlfriend.
45.
Have a risk-adverse character stuck in a hostage situation with a
risk-happy character.
46. For
the next week, watch strangers carefully and take notes in your phone
about any peculiar gestures or body language. Combine the three most
interesting ones to describe a character as she goes grocery
shopping.
47. Buy
a package of the pills that expand into foam animals, and put a random
one in a glass of warm water. Whatever it turns out to be, have that
animal surprise your main character in a scene.
48.
Have your character faced with a decision witness a rare, awe-inspiring event,
and describe how it helps them make their decision.
49.
Imagine if your character met for the first time his or her long-lost
identical twin. What personality traits would they share and which ones would
have changed because of their unique experiences?
50. If
a character got burned by a hot pan, what type of strange reaction would
they have that would reveal what they value most?
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