Post by Steven Barnes on Aug 22, 2005 11:31:53 GMT -5
Question for Steve. If someone is going to follow your 52 stories per year schedule, do you have any suggestions re: generating ideas. I'm not really asking (or maybe I am) the perennial question - where do you get your ideas?
I've written 3 or 4 novels (none published yet), but I think it would benefit me to do the 52 story per year regimen for at least a year. And what I'm running into is that I feel that I tend to write and have novel-length ideas.
I start working on a short story, and it quickly becomes a novella. But, just curious if you have any method that you use for yourself if you're suddenly invited to contribute a short story, the deadline is very near, and you don't have a single idea for a story top of mind at that moment.
Jeff
Jeffrey Rutherford
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There are at least three different answers to your query, Jeff. But first of all, let me congratulate you on even CONSIDERING taking the 1-year challenge! You are made of stern stuff.
1) Ideas. Give yourself permission for the ideas to be lousy. Believe me, poor execution can make a great idea suck, and great execution can find gold in a pile of literary horse droppings. the point is to finish the stories, not create classics. The quality will be discovered almost incidentally, along the way. You have to learn to take your "governor" off. Keep a dream diary to get familiar with your creative flow. Write down your top fifty movies and books, find a side character, and tell a story about them that wasn't in the original work. End a favorite story differently, or begin it differently.
2) Stories have no intrinsic length. TREATMENTS of stories have intrinsic length. It's all discipline. Begin with the end of the story already known. Choose a single incident from the story world, and build your work around that. Treat this as a specific exercise--I can't say what will trigger yoru undrstanding, but the discipline of keeping the sotry under 2500 words will do you a world of good. Don't worry if the first five or ten or twenty suck!
3)You are complicating the process. Most of writing is just work. The magic is discovered along the way. Read ten times as much as you write, read one level 'up" from your intended result, and have fun. No stress. The stress will come later, believe me.
Steve
I've written 3 or 4 novels (none published yet), but I think it would benefit me to do the 52 story per year regimen for at least a year. And what I'm running into is that I feel that I tend to write and have novel-length ideas.
I start working on a short story, and it quickly becomes a novella. But, just curious if you have any method that you use for yourself if you're suddenly invited to contribute a short story, the deadline is very near, and you don't have a single idea for a story top of mind at that moment.
Jeff
Jeffrey Rutherford
####
There are at least three different answers to your query, Jeff. But first of all, let me congratulate you on even CONSIDERING taking the 1-year challenge! You are made of stern stuff.
1) Ideas. Give yourself permission for the ideas to be lousy. Believe me, poor execution can make a great idea suck, and great execution can find gold in a pile of literary horse droppings. the point is to finish the stories, not create classics. The quality will be discovered almost incidentally, along the way. You have to learn to take your "governor" off. Keep a dream diary to get familiar with your creative flow. Write down your top fifty movies and books, find a side character, and tell a story about them that wasn't in the original work. End a favorite story differently, or begin it differently.
2) Stories have no intrinsic length. TREATMENTS of stories have intrinsic length. It's all discipline. Begin with the end of the story already known. Choose a single incident from the story world, and build your work around that. Treat this as a specific exercise--I can't say what will trigger yoru undrstanding, but the discipline of keeping the sotry under 2500 words will do you a world of good. Don't worry if the first five or ten or twenty suck!
3)You are complicating the process. Most of writing is just work. The magic is discovered along the way. Read ten times as much as you write, read one level 'up" from your intended result, and have fun. No stress. The stress will come later, believe me.
Steve