Posts filed under ‘Writing and Visual Prompts’

A Week In Pictures: Some Visual Inspiration

Remember to check out the Writer’s Tip and Prompt located to the right (yep, scroll down just a bit).

Melissa

September 24, 2010 at 3:18 pm 2 comments

A Week In Pictures: Visual Prompts

Get inspired and write.

September 17, 2010 at 1:02 pm Leave a comment

Week In Pictures: A Visit with Mark Twain

Melissa

August 20, 2010 at 10:33 am Leave a comment

A Week In Pictures: The Details of Home

Look around, nearby, at the inspirations that surround where you are from. It’s these little details that we tend to overlook.

What inspires you around your home? Capture it. Write about it.

–Melissa

July 23, 2010 at 12:19 pm Leave a comment

A Week In Pictures

Visual Prompt: Chose an image and incorporate what you see or feel into a scene. Write.

– Melissa

 

July 16, 2010 at 11:37 am Leave a comment

Where’s Your Inspiration Hiding?

The beauty behind writing is life. And behind life is freedom. The freedom to explore and find the You in wherever you are.

–Melissa

July 9, 2010 at 12:31 pm Leave a comment

Do You Know These Famous Authors?

A Little Bit of Author Trivia… Guess the Author.

– Melissa

(Ernest Hemingway, Jim Harrison, Emily Dickinson, Robert Frost) — Now can you name a piece of writing by each author?

June 25, 2010 at 11:18 am 1 comment

A Week In Pictures: Skies of a Different Color

From the Western slopes to Tennessee and Upper Michigan, the skies inspire thought and appreciation.  –Melissa

June 11, 2010 at 12:47 pm Leave a comment

A Week In Pictures

Faces of Your Characters

Details of Your Setting

Remember to share your photographs by simply e-mailing them into blog@wordclay.com.

–Melissa

June 4, 2010 at 2:01 pm Leave a comment


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Weekly Writing Prompt

Imagine a setting or situation in which you would be an outsider. Say it’s your first day learning karate and the rest of your class are black belts. Or perhaps you find yourself smack dab in the middle of an NRA conference and you adamantly oppose firearms. How would you react? How would you feel? Being an outsider can often provide the perfect springboard into your character’s mentalities as well as an objective viewpoint that can be used to describe settings more naturally. (2/4/11)

Weekly Writing Tip

When it comes to writing, seeing isn’t always believing. Next time you find yourself in front of your keyboard about to begin another piece, try closing your eyes and typing. Imagine the setting, characters, thoughts and emotions you’re trying to capture and start writing without opening your eyes. Just the look of a sentence can often disrupt your flow or rhythm, and rereading what you’ve already written will not only slow you down, but upset your train of thought as well. (2/4/11)

Last Week’s Writing Prompt

Remember, not all stories have resolutions. Think about a conflict that’s online, where the characters simply exist within the tension. Perhaps an archeological search for some relic, or maybe a neighborly feud that gone on for years. Now, write a story or poem that attempts to capture this conflict, without reaching for a clean, fair or ironic resolution.

Last Week’s Writing Tip

Read the reviews. See how readers and critics think. Don’t fall into the same juvenile traps the books with bad reviews often do. Learn from their mistakes and shape your manuscript into a publication worthy of rave reviews.

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