Creative
writing exercises are a good way to develop right brain activity and to stretch
the imagination.
Practice
in building scenes, characters, dialogue and theme can give a beginning writer
experience in these techniques and can also help a veteran writer develop new
ways to describe a scene or character or to deepen theme.
Creative
Writing: Scene-Building Exercise
Being
aware of your environment can help set scenes in a work of fiction. For a skill-building journal exercise, take a
walk and jot down what you see, feel, hear.
Concentrate on the senses. Pay
attention to small details, the falling of leaves, the buzz of insects, the
scent of flowers.
Contrast
the scene before you now with one of an opposite season. If it is spring, describe how it will look in
the fall. If it is winter, describe
summer.
Creative
Writing: Character-Developing Exercise
Jotting
down detailed character sketches is good practice for developing fictional
characters. Have you ever known an
interesting “character”? Describe him or
her in detail. What makes them unique? How do they talk, act, dress? What makes them different from other people?
Pick
out three physical characteristics and describe them—the color of their eyes, the shape of their nose, their
physical build. Now pick out three
non-physical characteristics such as their manner of dress, a habit such as
tapping a pencil on the desk or scratching an ear, the way they walk. By mixing,
matching, adding and deleting characteristics, a writer can create a backlog of
unique and interesting characters.
Creative
Writing: Dialogue-Building Exercise
Good
writing dialogue often springs from an overheard or remembered conversation
from long ago. Being aware of
conversations around you makes fictional conversation sound more real.
Recall
an interesting conversation you have heard at a restaurant, bus stop, or any
other place. Make it more dramatic by
turning it into an argument. Now change
the subject of the conversation.
Creative
Writing: Theme-Building Exercises
Many
writers struggle with theme. Theme is different from plot. Plot is the action of the story. Theme is the mental action–what the story is
really about, the message the author is trying to convey and leave with the
reader. Most themes test courage or
moral integrity. An example of a common theme
is “crime doesn’t pay” or “honesty is the best policy”.
Jot
down a list of qualities such as honesty, loyalty, perseverance. Now think of an instance where this quality
might pay off.
Write
down a list of old sayings and quotes from Ben Franklin and other sources. Then think of a story to go along with
them. For instance, “the early bird gets
the worm.” Think of a time where the
early bird came out ahead at work--by getting the account or the
promotion. What if the early bird did
the right thing and didn’t get their reward?
Would they be bitter, revengeful, or take it in stride? How the character reacts determines the theme.
Imagine
a person caught in an unusual hypothetical situation that calls for a moral
choice of some kind. Stretch the
imagination by wondering “what if”. For
example, what if you found out your best friend was embezzling from a
company. Would you tell? Remain silent? What if you came across a purse on a park
bench with a winning lottery ticket inside
Will you redeem it or look for the owner? What if you had the opportunity to steal a bag
of diamonds and blame it on a known criminal?
Use
these examples or make up your own exercises and practice daily to develop the
habit of thinking creatively in terms of scene, character, dialogue and theme.
More Writing Tips: Fiction:From Writing to Publication
More Writing Tips: Fiction:From Writing to Publication