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15 writing exercises

Started by Cain, April 22, 2007, 01:07:39 PM

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Cain

Writing exercises are a great way to both increase your skill as a writer and to generate new ideas for future work. They can also give you a new perspective on your current project. One of the great benefits of private writing exercises is that you can free yourself of fear and perfectionism. To grow as a writer, it is important to sometimes write without the expectation of publication. Don,Äôt be afraid to be imperfect. That is what practice is for. What you write for any of these exercises may not be your best work, but it is practice for when you will need to write your best work.

    * Pick ten people you know and write a one-sentence description for each of them.
    * Record five minutes of a talk radio show. Write down the dialogue and add narrative descriptions of the speakers and actions as if you were writing a scene.
    * Write a 500-word biography of your life.
    * Write your obituary. List all of your life,Äôs accomplishments. You can write it as if you died today or fifty or more years in the future.
    * Write a 300-word description of your bedroom.
    * Write a fictional interview with yourself, an acquaintance, a famous figure or a fictional character. Do it in the style of an appropriate (or inappropriate) magazine or publication such as Time, People, Rolling Stone, Cosmopolitan, Seventeen or Maxim.
    * Pick up a newspaper or supermarket tabloid. Scan the articles until you find one that interests you and use it as the basis for a scene or story.
    * Keep a diary of a fictional character.
    * Take a passage from a book, a favorite or a least favorite, and rewrite the passage in a different style such as noir, gothic romance, pulp fiction or horror story.
    * Pick an author, one you like though not necessarily your favorite, and make a list of what you like about the way they write. Do this from memory first, without rereading their work. After you,Äôve made your list, reread some of their work and see if you missed anything or if your answers change. Analyze what elements of their writing style you can add to your own, and what elements you should not or cannot add. Remember that your writing style is your own, and that you should only try to think of ways to add to your own style. Never try to mimic someone else for more than an exercise or two.
    * Take a piece of your writing that you have written in first person and rewrite it in third person, or vice-versa. You can also try this exercise changing tense, narrators, or other stylistic elements. Don,Äôt do this with an entire book. Stick to shorter works. Once you commit to a style for a book, never look back or you will spend all of your time rewriting instead of writing.
    * Try to identify your earliest childhood memory. Write down everything you can remember about it. Rewrite it as a scene. You may choose to do this from your current perspective or from the perspective you had at that age.
    * Remember an old argument you had with another person. Write about the argument from the point of view of the other person. Remember that the idea is to see the argument from their perspective, no your own. This is an exercise in voice, not in proving yourself right or wrong.
    * Write a 200-word description of a place. You can use any and all sensory descriptions but sight: you can describe what it feels like, sounds like, smells like and even tastes like. Try to write the description in such a way that people will not miss the visual details.
    * Sit in a restaurant or a crowded area and write down the snippets of conversation you hear. Listen to the people around you ,Äî how they talk and what words they use. Once you have done this, you can practice finishing their conversations. Write your version of what comes next in the conversation. Match their style.

http://www.jjuriaan.com/Fifteen_Craft_Exercises_for_Writers.htm


I'm going to do this later, actually.  Its good practice, I think, and no matter how good you are, practice never hurts.

hunter s.durden

Good shit right here.
I love these kinds of exercises.
This space for rent.

Thurnez Isa

Through me the way to the city of woe, Through me the way to everlasting pain, Through me the way among the lost.
Justice moved my maker on high.
Divine power made me, Wisdom supreme, and Primal love.
Before me nothing was but things eternal, and eternal I endure.
Abandon all hope, you who enter here.

Dante

Dr. Cow Ass

This is also an excellent and somewhat productive way to kill time in school and some of these can be quite fun too.

Thx for posting.
I bring the Spicy.

DJRubberducky

Quote from: Cain on April 22, 2007, 01:07:39 PM
    * Keep a diary of a fictional character.

I think I would need to take this one step further and make it a MySpace page or LJ or something like that.
- DJRubberducky
Quote from: LMNODJ's post is sort of like those pills you drop into a glass of water, and they expand into a dinosaur, or something.

Black sheep are still sheep.

Jenne

Quote from: DJRubberducky on April 23, 2007, 02:45:31 PM
Quote from: Cain on April 22, 2007, 01:07:39 PM
    * Keep a diary of a fictional character.

I think I would need to take this one step further and make it a MySpace page or LJ or something like that.

I think the asshats from this forum and others I am on with them do this quite naturally as alts on boards.   It's quite fascinating.

Jasper

Good, solid content Cain.  Very relevant to my interests.

Genocide Device

::walks in, sits down, starts taking notes::

Huh,Ķ I have had a journal of a fictional character before... sad to admit it was for a role playing character.
Coffee: the old prozac

P3nT4gR4m

I've actually read fiction that was produced from roleplay games. Nothing spectacular but passable pulp nonetheless.

I'm up to my arse in Brexit Numpties, but I want more.  Target-rich environments are the new sexy.
Not actually a meat product.
Ass-Kicking & Foot-Stomping Ancient Master of SHIT FUCK FUCK FUCK
Awful and Bent Behemothic Results of Last Night's Painful Squat.
High Altitude Haggis-Filled Sex Bucket From Beyond Time and Space.
Internet Monkey Person of Filthy and Immoral Pygmy-Porn Wart Contagion
Octomom Auxillary Heat Exchanger Repairman
walking the fine line line between genius and batshit fucking crazy

"computation is a pattern in the spacetime arrangement of particles, and it's not the particles but the pattern that really matters! Matter doesn't matter." -- Max Tegmark

Cain

I always heard that the Drizzt stories based in the Forgotten Realms were considered quite good, for the genre.  Though I haven't read any yet.

Genocide Device

Okay,Ķ I,Äôma throw my geek down.  Any one played changeling by white wolf?  The concept is you play a mortal with a fairy sole.  The journal involved the characters realizing his inner self as this mythological creature called a red cap and slightly along his life in the game its self (which lasted all of 4 sessions).  The catalyst involve this so called malicious spirit and the love of his parents conflicting with its nature,Ķ I know that sounds emo but it makes for a hell of a story in the nature vs nurture thing of conflict.

GD
Coffee: the old prozac

Ambassador KAOS

Quote from: Cain on April 27, 2007, 05:01:30 PM
I always heard that the Drizzt stories based in the Forgotten Realms were considered quite good, for the genre.  Though I haven't read any yet.

I read that series when I was in Jr. HS.

At the time I loved it.  I seriously doubt I'd be able to do that read again now, even barring that fact that I stopped reading fiction years ago.  It really is one of those age appropriate things, IMO, though admittedly it is reputed to be one of the best of it's genre.
AKK: twice as modded as you'd believe.

phear my 1337 braynz!!!!11one!

Quote from: Rev. What's-His-Name? on March 30, 2007, 11:42:40 PM
At this point, I believe there only two things that are going to stop him.

1.  His connection going down
2.  HIMEOBS



NEWS:  Principia Discordia dot com:  Now with 90% less Ambassador KAOS!

B_M_W

FUCK!


....


*sigh* Anything that I ever read of R. A. Salvatore is ruined now...
One by one, we break the sheep from their Iron Bar Prisons and expand their imaginations, make them think for themselves. In turn, they break more from their prisons. Eventually, critical mass is reached. Our key word: Resolve. Evangelize with compassion and determination. And realize that there will be few in the beginning. We are hand picking our successors. They are the future of Discordianism. Let us guide our future with intelligence.

     --Reverse Brainwashing: A Guide http://www.principiadiscordia.com/forum/index.php?topic=9801.0


6.5 billion Buddhas walking around.

99.xxxxxxx% forgot they are Buddha.

Ambassador KAOS

AKK: twice as modded as you'd believe.

phear my 1337 braynz!!!!11one!

Quote from: Rev. What's-His-Name? on March 30, 2007, 11:42:40 PM
At this point, I believe there only two things that are going to stop him.

1.  His connection going down
2.  HIMEOBS



NEWS:  Principia Discordia dot com:  Now with 90% less Ambassador KAOS!