Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Transanimalation

An animal wandered into your home and decided it wasn't going to leave. As the days pass, you get the oddest feeling you know this animal, except as a human. Eventually it's impossible to deny this animal was someone famous.

Do they begin speaking? Do they want to reclaim their previous fame? Do they have unfinished business?

It can be a famous person from this world, from the world your characters are in, or from a story brought into the mundane here-and-now world.

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Christmas fantasies

Magical Arrival by Anne Stokes
You've been transported to another world by one of those pervasive mysterious vortexes that are always plucking people and hurling them to mysterious locals.

Your watch tells you it's almost Christmas. It makes no difference whether the time on your new world matches home, darn it, you're feeling homesick and nostalgic and want to celebrate Christmas.

So how do you pump up the idea of Christmas to get those around you intrigued? What are you able to recreate? What compromises need to be made? What new ideas do your otherworlders have? Is there a Scrooge among them?

Here's wishing you a Merry Christmas in whatever world you're occupying this season! :-)

Monday, December 19, 2011

Deviant CAVE


Deviantly describe the image. Don't use rock or water. Dig into what objects look and feel like rather than telling what they are. Capture the senses' experience. What does it feel like to your whole body? What does it sound like. What does it smell like? Taste like?

Go further and find a mood or personality of the place and let those inspire the descriptive words you choose.

Try unexpected adjectives and vivid verbs. For example, svelt, sleek, oozing, crouching aren't words normally associated with places, but can create fresh images.

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Claus vs Krampus


Krampus is Santa's dark companion. While Santa hands out the presents to good boys and girls, Krampus punishes the bad ones, striking them with rusty chains then shoving them in his sack to drag to the underworld. (Really. I'm not making this up! It's a Germanic legend.)

Since we don't hear about Krampus much nowadays, something must have happened. Are children not bad enough? Did Santa or someone do away with him? Is he on an extended leave of absence intending to return one day? Why did he leave and what will happen when he returns? How and why did he become Santa's companion anyway?

Wednesday, December 07, 2011

Tabby's tabby tabby

That's tabby concrete Photoshopped beneath the tabby.
This was in Anu Garg's Word A Day mail yesterday. Such a great variety of meanings to inspire :-) Use as many as you can in a paragraph or story.

tabby

MEANING:
noun:
1. A domestic cat with a striped or brindled coat.
2. A domestic cat, especially a female one.
3. A spinster.
4. A spiteful or gossipy woman.
5. A fabric of plain weave.
6. A watered silk fabric.
7. A concrete made of lime, oyster shells, and gravel.

(Forgive the miss last week. I got overwhelmed by the projects that overwhelmed my finishing NaNo this year (for the first time in 6 years.) And my daughter was visiting. :-) Though she managed to finish NaNo is style! :-)

Monday, December 05, 2011

ANGELic deviant

ANGEL

.~          How does one Deviantly Describe?          ~.
Short version ...
From the given mundane, snoozer of a word, generate as many different-from-each-other descriptions as you can. (Set a timer for 10-15 minutes if you wish.)

Longer version ...
Is preserved at the HOME of the first Deviant Description.

Friday, November 25, 2011

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Chocolate bits

What if Hershey's, Godiva, and Dove chocolates were people? How would their personalities differ? What would chocolate talk about? If you need some specific ideas, what if the chocolate people were:
  • kids at a playground.
  • siblings.
  • discussing their love lives.
  • soccer moms.
  • working at Starbucks.
  • working at Weight Watchers.

  • watching Chocolat with Johnny Depp. (Or Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.)
  • at their weekly NaNoWriMo write in. (Who else is there?)
  • all interviewing for the same job.
  • meeting for drinks on Valentine's Day.
  • mother, father and child.
  • old friends and rivals, getting together for hot chocolate in their sunset years to reminisce.
  • entertaining the troops with the USO (United Services Organization).
  • discussing the new "chocolate" who has just moved into the neighborhood.
  • at the funeral of a mutual acquaintance. (Nestle? Cheapo waxy chocolate?)

Monday, November 21, 2011

Deviant DOLMEN


Deviantly describe the object. Usually with Deviant Descriptions you won't use the object names, but what you want to "paint" for your reader is the shapes of the rocks and how they've been arranged. If you wish you can imagine a less sculpted environment for them.

Dig into what objects look and feel like rather than telling what they are. Capture the senses' experience. What does it feel like to your whole body? What does it sound like. What does it smell like? Taste like?

Go further and find a mood or personality of the place and let those inspire the descriptive words you choose.

Try unexpected adjectives and vivid verbs. For example, svelt, sleek, oozing, crouching aren't words normally associated with places, but can create fresh images.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Delightfully rejected

Write a rejection letter. As an extra challenge, make it so nice the person isn't positive they've been rejected. If you need some ideas:

Rejected from Star Fleet Academy.
Rejection of a really bad book.
Rejected from Hogwarts.
Rejected from Match.com.
Rejected from Hell.
Rejection of a town "improvement" idea.
Rejected as a comic book hero.
Rejected from demonhood.
Rejected from Godhood.
Rejected from Angel Academy.
Rejection of a spell from The Grimoire (Standard Edition) (Revised).
Rejection of the ugly duckling.
Rejection of Santa's replacement.
Rejected from reform school.
Rejected from charm school.
Rejected from the zombie pack.
Rejected from the Vampire Hall of Fame.

For some grins when you're done: Other People's Rejection Letters and Letters of Note.

Sunday, November 13, 2011

"All through my career ..."


The sentiment is spot on but the word count doesn't cut it for NaNoWriMo this month. (1667 is needed to achieve 50,000 by the end of the month. Unless you're starting today in which case you'll need 3125 :-) It's doable!)

Friday, November 11, 2011

Master and servant

Master and servant

Warm up or a plot ninja for your NaNo novel? I collected a slew of Plot Ninjas if you'd like to try some.

Wednesday, November 09, 2011

Time flies

Where did the Time go?

It must be a great place Time goes to since Time's always flying there, and it's a known fact that Time stops for no one on its journey.

So, what's it like this place that Time flies to?

And, while you're at it, who is this Right Time fellow people are often waiting for?

People are often racing against Time, but do they ever beat it?

Is the Time Being that things are sometimes done for, a cross between Time and a Human?

If you have Time on your hands, is there a product to remove it? And why would Time pause long enough to get on someone's hands when it's always flying?

Monday, November 07, 2011

Deviantly FAMILY

FAMILY

.~          How does one Deviantly Describe?          ~.
Short version ...
From the given mundane, snoozer of a word, generate as many different-from-each-other descriptions as you can. (Set a timer for 10-15 minutes if you wish.)

Longer version ...
Is preserved at the HOME of the first Deviant Description.

Friday, November 04, 2011

30 days of literary techniques to increase word cou ... er ......

... the literary value of your NaNo!

A new literary technique to goof with every day of NaNo :-) Some of these you will not want to do in a publishable novel so here's your chance to get them out of your system!

Last year I posted new description challenges each day. So if you don't like the day's technique, here's some alternative suggestions to try: A month of NaNo prompts.

Most of these came from Wikipedia's List of literary techniques. There's an even larger list at Literary Devices. Some are a bit obscure, but the most common are listed on the left.

  1. Infodumping and Incluing -- Write out all you think your reader needs to know about your characters and world to understand your story. (Infodump) Then set it "aside" (at the bottom of your NaNo of course! Don't want to lose all those words!) And then reveal it slooooowly (Incluing) as part of the story. As you're writing your novel, don't break to spend several paragraphs describing the purpose of something. Show your characters using it. Show what it does. This will actually increase your word count. It takes far more words to reveal things slowly than all at once! :-)

  2. Cliffhanger -- End your current chapter, even better, every chapter, on a cliffhanger. Dare to be hamfisted and literally hang your characters from cliffs or build up to a big secret reveal. Or more subtly leave the reader wondering what's going to happen next, how they'll get out of the current pickle, get the next clue, get the kitten out of the tree so they'll have to start the next chapter.

    (Cliff hangers were originally devised when novels were serialized monthly in newspapers to bring readers back. In The Perils of Pauline, a weekly silent movie serial, they became an expected part of the story. And then took off in modern day as a staple of TV season endings when the whole country spent the summer wondering Who shot J.R.? on Dallas. Which led to annoying the bejeezus out of fans when a favorite show ended the season on a cliffhanger ... and then got canceled over the summer!)

  3. Tragic flaw -- Have your character's main weakness drive him to make a choice that he must but that takes him further from his goal.

    If your character is flawless so far, there's Chaotic Shiny's Motive generator, Death Quaker's Big List of Merits and Flaws (scroll down, there are more lists :-) and Dark World's 123 Character Flaws to give you some ideas.

  4. Bathos -- Begin with a glorious, noble, exalted description of someone or something, then bring the description splashing down to pig-wallow level. Try humorous analogies combined with purple prose (elaborate and ornate descriptions which is great for word count!).

    Some examples:

    "The ships hung in the sky in much the same way that bricks don't." Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

    "The ballerina rose gracefully en pointe and extended one slender leg behind her, like a dog at a fire hydrant." Jennifer Hart, Arlington. From a Washington Post contest where there are more examples.

    (Another definition of bathos is when something intended to be serious is unintentionally funny. But it's kind of hard to intentionally be unintentional!)

  5. Defamiliarization -- Describe something that's so familiar that we hardly notice it in a way that makes people look at it in a fresh way. One way is to describe an adult-familiar object from a small child's point of view. Or an animal's. Or an alien's. For instance a gun might be an object for hurling bits of metal at a moving object to stop it.

  6. Ironic Juxtaposition --Have your character interact with his or her opposite, to emphasize or shine a different light on certain traits. It could be a mirror opposite friend, pet, coffee shop, snack ....

    Note: If the character is unaware, it's called juxtaposition. If the character realizes, it's called torment. ;-)

    For some visual examples, there's The Most Horribly Awkward Billboard Juxtapositions. (If that site disappears Google "billboard juxtapositions).

  7. Alliteration -- Have the next character you introduce speak alliteratively. Props if it's a major character! :-) Could be a spell or a condition that strikes under certain circumstances. Or a paragraph of description that's alliterative.

    The most common alliteration is initial sound (Kathryn's Crazy Corner Kazakhstani Cafe). But it can also be repeated consonants (consonance) or vowels (assonance) in the first accented syllables. (Examples from Wikipedia: "some mammals are clammy" and "yellow wedding bells".) Which should be easier but it probably takes some practice to get your brain to organize words like that. :-)

  8. Aphorisms -- Begin with a pithy observed truth that a character has realized. Have others argue about it. (Maybe you'll find your novel's theme or underlying story among them. :-) (Subscribe to Aphorisms Galore and get an aphorism in your mail every day.)
    • "I have learned to use the word 'impossible' with the greatest caution." -- Werner Von Braun
    • "Too much of a good thing is just that." -- Brian J. Dent
    • "Love your enemies: they'll go crazy trying to figure out what you're up to." -- Unknown
    • Egoist: A person of low taste, more interested in themselves than in me." -- Ambrose Bierce
    • Pretty much all of Ambrose Bierce's The Devil's Dictionary is witty, pithy aphorisms.

  9. Plot twist -- By now you can probably see where your story's headed. Which in week 2 can feel like nowhere! So twist it. Have characters not do what's expected. Have them make entirely different choices. Have the mellow character shoot the character you hate. Have the workaholic take Friday off to cosplay (a different character everyday) at the weekend SciFi Convention. Have the least colorful character go home to draw some more erotic scenes in their popular online comic series Ninja Pirate Babes in Space.

    Okay, that's stretching plot twist a bit! :-) Plot twists are surprising turns that you then realize make sense. But the beauty of writing is you can go back later and sprinkle in the clues that lead up to one or more of these events as if you had planned them all along!

  10. Dialogue or Interview -- Take a side jaunt in your story and have the POV character's parents -- or ex-girlfriend, former cell mate, previous owner -- talk about him or her.

  11. Anthropomorphism aka Personification -- Give an animal or object human-like desires. Like the controlling alarm clock that won't shut off until it's assigned human is upright. An animal who wants to take its bad mood out on the next human that wanders by.

  12. Back-story -- Reveal the back story of the location your character spends the most time in. (Or the oldest or most interesting if they're usually in a brand new place.) How it began. The scandals, the romances, the tragedies that have given it the personality that it has. The more you can find to tell, the more words. (Words are good.)

    Keep writing and you'll uncover the unexpected connections with who your character is, their flaws, and what they desire, which is why they go there in the first place (even if you didn't know ;-).

  13. Motif -- Bring back an object, event, place, personage type (like a teacher, a cat, an old man smoking a clay pipe) that felt connected to your character. Bring back multiple things. (More words!) Play with them until you find the things that resonate with the story for you. (And you might actually be uncovering a theme. Whoa, heavy duty literary technique! :-D)

    Little soap box moment here. What bugged me about the way literature was taught in school was teachers implied great writers had memorized all these techniques and why and how they worked and then applied them. But great writers write by what feels right. In their early years, they played. They tried things out. They found things (by reading other writers, by trying things) that sort of felt right and played some more until they felt better. The resulting greatness is way more by feel than by applying "expert" knowledge.

    Motif (and theme) especially seems like one of those "How could someone possibly know what will work before they write?" Except for the scarlet letter in The Scarlet Letter, mostly writers don't. So go play with stuff. And let the playing generate lots of words. :-)

  14. Metonyms -- Get your fangs over here, park your butt on that seat, to give an eyeball to my fingerwiggle about name changing metonyms.

    A metonym calls one thing by a related thing. (Nicknames are often metonyms.)

    For the next 1667 words try naming people, things and actions by something related.

    There are loads of different kinds. The details may be inspiring or paralyzing depending on your personality so proceed with self knowledge :-)
    • Coke for soda, Googling for searching, dishes for everything used to prepare and eat a meal (specific kind for general kinds)
    • cat for lion, bug for any creepy crawly (general kind for specific kind)
    • police for police officer (whole for part)
    • wheels for car (part for whole)
    • crown for ruler, ear for listen, New York for someone from New York, pink slip for being fired (related thing for the thing)
    • steel for sword, "paper or plastic?" for grocery bag (material for object)
    • (And more :-)

    There are lists -- which of course you'll resist visiting until you have today's word count achieved ;-) -- at List of metonyms and Synecdoche.

  15. Speech patterns -- I came across these at The Handbook of Rhetorical Devices (where there are lots more devices useful for speech patterns, though mixed in with devices not as useful. <-- An unintentional litotes!) These would have been more useful at the beginning of NaNo when new characters popup like dandelions. Sorry I didn't find them sooner!

    Litotes (I keep wanting to "depluralize" it to LIGHT TOTE, but it's LIGH TOE TEEZ) -- Have the next character you introduce frequently negate the opposite of what he means when he speaks. That is:
    • good becomes "not the worst"
    • unintelligent becomes "not a rocket scientist"
    • old becomes not as young as she once was"
    I didn't even know there was a word for that but what a handy way to increase word count :-)

    Epizeuxis (I haven't even tried to pronounce that one) -- repetition of one word for emphasis:
    • The best way to describe this portion of South America is lush, lush, lush.
    • What do you see? Wires, wires, everywhere wires.
    • Polonius: "What are you reading?" Hamlet: "Words, words, words."

    Hyperbole -- Exaggeration to evoke strong feelings
    • "Why did I not know of this majesty before!"
    • "I can die happy now!
    • I think I just gave myself a brain anurism laughing. That's like... all of my favorite things. Right there."
    (All cribbed from my daughter who is The Most Amazing Hyperbolist EVAH!!! 8-D) Perhaps another character takes all the hyperbole as literal statements.

  16. Letter - Write a letter from you to your POV character or a favorite character. (To make it part of your novel, it can be an anonymous letter they receive.) Tell them what you love about them. Tell them what irritates you. Tell them what potential you see in them that their author has yet to capture. If they are a minor character, perhaps how they deserve a better role and what that could have been and how things would change.

  17. (Idealized) Author Surrogate -- Have you created a Mary Sue/Gary Stu, eg, a thinly-disguised (to everyone else) wish-fulfillment fantasy version of yourself? There's still time to kill them off if you have! And still time to create one to kill off if you haven't.

    To check if you have a Mary Sue, or help in creating a really bang-up one, there's The Universal Mary-Sue Litmus Test. The last part provides some De-Sue-ifiers that you could employ on your Mary Sue instead of death. Both equally guaranteed to add to word count.

  18. Oxymoron -- two words stuck together that seem to create a contradiction. Make up your own or use some generated at Serendipitous Oxymorons. (Each guaranteed to provide at least two words for your NaNo!)

    If you'd like a whole bunch to work into your NaNo, there's Jim Wegryn's handpicked list of oxymorons and a "complete" list of oxymorons.

  19. Apostrophe -- Apostrophe is when a character directs speech at an absent person, an abstract concept, or an object. So let hem have a heart to heart with hatred, the Fates, their adversary, the ficus plant.

  20. First person narration -- Write in the first person for a scene. It can be the main character, one of the side characters, an animal, the ficus plant from yesterday You only get to pass on to the reader what your POV character/object can know.

  21. Parody -- Have your character(s) attend a play that's a parody version of the story they've experienced so far. Paint those characters and situations broadly. It's an opportunity to take it over the top in places where you played it too safe. After the play, do your characters recognize themselves and their situation? Do they each see themselves as the most sympathetic character in the play but easily identify others?

  22. Pathetic fallacy -- The name doesn't sound much like what it is. Perhaps let the phrase inspire your NaNo until it runs out of steam. Then give human emotions to nature (or inanimate objects or animals). Bring on the cruel winds, smiling suns, the weeping clouds. Have the environment respond to your character's trials and tribulations with sympathy or callous disregard.

  23. Break the fourth wall -- Allow a character step out of the story and address the reader directly. Let him or her give their frank opinion about what's going on, about the other characters, about how they're being portrayed.

  24. Simile -- No, not smilies. They might not count as words. A comparison using “like” or “as”. "She felt as stuffed as the turkey after finishing Thanksgiving dinner."
    Metaphor -- A comparison not using "like" or "as" when one thing is said to be another. "He is an eating machine who can devour and entire turkey dinner in under three minutes."

  25. Deus ex machina -- Did you introduce some event or element into your NaNo that's gumming up the ending? What simpler way to fix things than a Deus ex machina, a god in the machine. Or a crocodile n the machine. Or an alien body snatching. Or roving band of ninja pirates. Or a sonic screwdriver.

  26. Cliché -- Expressions that are as worn as an old shoe. So try some fresh alternatives at Cliché modifier.

    Snowclone -- Have a character who speaks by using cliches as a template such as:

    In your X, Ying your Z.
    X, X everywhere.
    X is the new Y.
    I'm a doctor, not a X.
    Have X, will travel.
    The X from Hell.
    I'm not an X, but I play one on TV.
    Not your father's X.
    The mother of all X's.

    There's a bunch more, listed by century at List of snowclones (sandbox) (still being refined for Wikipedia) or List of snowclones (the eventual final resting spot).

  27. Eulogy -- Did you kill off significant characters, places, things, ideals? Then have friends, enemies, acquaintances, their third grade teacher, give a speech at their funeral or at a memorial service. Strictly speaking a eulogy is in praise, but characters often don't care about definitions and will say what they want to say ;-)

  28. Onomatopoeia -- words that represent the sound of something. Have lots of sounds in the following scene! Lots of pops and whooshes and words you totally make up on the spot. Unless you're writing a comic book script, or poetry, this would generally be a No. But since it's NaNo, it can be a Yes. :-)

  29. Anecdotes, Fables, Parables -- If you're struggling as the finish line looms, give your characters' inner storyteller free rein as they huddle around the campfire awaiting the final showdown. Let them tell tales of their youth, or couch the lessons they've learned over the past few thousand words in stories where those involved are thinly disguised as anthropomorphized animals or objects.

  30. If you've finished your story but not your words ....

    Prologue -- Go back in history to the genesis of the problem.

    Character directory -- list all your characters and a brief description of their important characteristics and role in the story. If you still need words, describe the important places.

    Chapter titles -- That are excessively long and descriptive. Chapter Seventeen: In which Stoen and Roc invent fire and discover it's a bad idea to bring it in to heat the tent at night.

    Table of contents -- Including all your chapter titles, of course.

    Blurb -- Some gripping text for the back of the book.

    Narrative hook -- Now that you're nearly done and have all those words to give you a better understanding of your story, write a narrative hook for the first chapter to grab the readers. Since the first chapter is the most important you should spend very little time on it at the beginning. How can you write an effective beginning until you know the story?

Some dispute over T-shirt sales

Some dispute over T-shirt sales

Warm up or a plot ninja for your NaNo novel? I collected a slew of Plot Ninjas if you'd like to try some.

Wednesday, November 02, 2011

A plethora of randomness

Here are a few random generators I stumbled across recently and a sampling from each. Perfect for NaNoWriMo or anytime you get stuck for inspiration throughout the year.

Plot scenario generator from Archetypewriting
  • The story starts when your protagonist is forced to accept a job. Another character is a soldier who always loses his/her temper.
  • The story starts when your protagonist receives a strange object in the mail. Another character is a clone who is your protagonist's favorite author.
  • The story starts when your protagonist recognizes someone who doesn't want to be recognized. Another character is an anesthesist who has engineered a deadly disease.
  • The story starts when your protagonist takes up a new hobby. Another character is an alien entity who has a secret power.
  • The story starts when your protagonist goes to a party. Another character is a pharmacist who is playing a joke that's gone wrong.
And from Chaotic Shiny. This is just a teeny sample of what's available there. Need a religion? Motto? Tavern? Futuristic spare part? Tarot card? Fancy drink? Apocalypse? Country song? (And still just a teeny sample! The choices are all conveniently listed down the left side at their site.)

Setting mashup
  • Iron Age Japan and game shows
  • 30th century Central Africa and archaeologists
  • Bronze Age Mongolia and demonic possession
  • Primeval Italy and war in the heavens
  • 9th century Alexandria, monks and space travel
Adventure generator
  • The heroes must keep watch over the wasteland before the vampire is silenced or the thief will be displeased.
  • The heroes must carry out the plans of the idealistic herald or the psychic can destroy them all.
  • The heroes must master the powers of the asylum without exposing their own ignorance or the lovers will never be reunited.
  • The heroes must find the unholy arrow without the paladin learning of their plans or the pirate will be able to summon the forces of darkness.
  • The heroes must retrieve the golden skull from the spire without violating their sworn oath.
Mashup Masher
  • Storm pirates and assassins in Bronze Age England. Some things you might run into: a scorned lover, an illness, a breakdown and an inept guard.
  • Angel thieves, magical war, rock stars and blood sports in Renaissance Translyvania. Some things to look out for are giant rats and bioengineered plagues. Some things you might run into: a discovery, a reunion, a love triangle and a journey. Don't forget about the quill, island, vampire, necklace and a parting of ways.
  • Vengenance arcanists, nightmare mercenaries, and lynx knights in primeval Far East. Valient heroes battle religious cults and fanatics. Some things you might run into: a case of mistaken identity and a heroic deed.
  • Death zealots of suffering, omniclerics of compassion, star pirates of memory in primeval Middle East. Recent problems include wild magic and world domination attempts gone wrong. Some things you might run into: eternal loneliness and a powerful friendship.
  • Lightning sorcerers, electroassassins, ghosts and hovercars in ancient China. Some things you might run into: a reversal of fortune, a klutzy sidekick and a fight. Don't forget about the ruby, courier and pilgrimage site.
Prophecies (the generator also lets you scramble them if you haven't had a headache in a while)
  • A journey shall not happen with the lucky bat at the beginning.
  • A legal problem will not happen in a courtyard.
  • The cynical devil will not seed and the hungry page will finally sneer at the coming of dissent.
  • The drunken mage shall conclude with the melancholy raven.
  • The fearless duelist will iron in a tomb at noon before the coming of music.
Motive generator -- I really liked these perhaps because I'm reading The Anatomy of Story: 22 Steps to Becoming a Master Storyteller by John Truby. He basically walks you through the process of building your story around your character's weakness. And this is quite the collection of weaknesses!
  • This character is motivated by overwhelming compassion, perverse duty and artificial paranoia. They are unaware of at least one of these.
  • This character is motivated by twisted integrity, envy and zealotry. They are up-front about at least one of these reasons.
  • This character is motivated by stubbornness, overwhelming honor and feigned loathing. They are trying to overcome at least one of these.
  • This character is motivated by mischief, confused impatience and pride.
  • This character is motivated by idealism, feigned insanity and wanderlust.
  • This character is motivated by overwhelming compassion, unlikely fear, stubbornness and desire for knowledge.
  • This character is motivated by idealism, paranoia, deep-seated resentment and twisted lust. They are very self-aware about all of this.

Monday, October 31, 2011

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

The pumpkins' revenge

They've been stabbed, mauled, made to display bizarre faces until they rot, smashed to bits on pavement as the perpetrators run off in glee.

This year the pumpkins have plotted their revenge.

Some other not-for-school (eg, not bland) Halloween prompts:

Figment's Fright 'N Write (Also a contest. Closes, of course, on 31st.)
More Halloween Writing Prompts from BellaOnline
Special: Halloween Writing Prompts

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

On the 13th day before Hall'ween

On the 13th day before Hall'ween, my dead love gave to me ....

Continue the song from there.

Or perhaps the 13 days following Halloween as the treats become increasingly less savory.

Monday, October 17, 2011

Deviant SWAMP


Deviantly describe the scene without using the names of the objects.

Don't use water or tree. Dig into what objects look and feel like rather than telling what they are.

Capture the senses' experience. What does it feel like to your whole body? What does it sound like. What does it smell like? Taste like?

Go further and find a mood or personality of the place and let those inspire the descriptive words you choose.

Try unexpected adjectives and vivid verbs. For example, svelt, sleek, oozing, crouching aren't words normally associated with places, but can create fresh images.

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Voyage of the Rock Aliens

Create 2-3 sequel titles for each of the following.

(Yes, they're real movie titles, but don't let reality interfere with you're imagination!)


Voyage of the Rock Aliens
Wife Versus Secretary
Windmills of the Gods
Valley of the Dolls
The Unsinkable Molly Brown
To Sleep with Anger
Tigers in Lipstick
Discovery of Television Among the Bees
Vacuuming Completely Nude in Paradise
The Tall Blond Man with One Black Shoe

And a couple more "Rock Aliens" my daughter stumbled across: Visitors and Rockets. Definitely a Lost in Space influence (and LiS influences) going on in both bands :-)

Wednesday, October 05, 2011

Camo kittehs


Camo kittehs.
Theyz in ur hous. Hidin in plain sites. Watchin yuz.

What is their purpose? Why are they undercover? Have they integrated into every home in the world? Or is that their long range plan?

Are they chameleons or do they need to seek out a home with a spot compatible with their fur?