Updated: Aug 17, 2023
At the beginning of a story I wrote, the main character was not keen on reading and even when his teacher encouraged him to escape into an adventure, he still insisted there was already too much going on in his own head to take in anyone else's world. No spoilers here, but our reluctant reader does become more interested in books as the pages turn and he realises there's more to a paper caper than just words!
A literary journey can get going when someone is given the right book. Simple as that! But what if it starts with meeting the right person to give it to you...
If you know a reluctant reader, or you are one yourself, it's probably just that they, or you, haven't yet discovered the story that will ignite curiosity. It may be a story that's already familiar; you just didn't get a spark the first time around. Or it may be the person who will offer you that book hasn't found you yet. Be they a librarian, teacher, bookseller, friend or family - they'll be waiting somewhere with something precious to share with you. When it happens, you might not even know; but in time you'll remember and want to pass that gift to someone else so they can experience the magic of reading too.
Ooh, I got all philosophical there! It's because I believe there really is a story, poem, comic, recipe book out there for everyone. It will find you when you least expect it, which is usually when you need it the most. Be bold and brave; read what's around you, write down what you notice and how it makes you feel. It might just be the spark you need to start your own story.
Updated: Aug 17, 2023
Consider these phrases:
Birds nesting
Buds opening
Blossom forming
Days lengthening
Nights warming
Now, close your eyes and try to form an image of what those things made you think of...
Did you collect them together, in one scene? Or did you see them as separate images?
Did you even see any images?
(Don't worry if you didn't - some people don't 'see' in pictures, we're all different)
How did those phrases make you feel? Why?
What did those things remind you of?
What else could you add?
Asking yourself questions and creating a mental picture (however you do it) is a great way to stir imagination - think of it like gathering the ingredients you need to make a cake.
I'm rubbish at making cakes, but very good at eating them!
Look out the window from your desk, or better still get out there for a walk and see the world around you. It might be just what you need to get a story started...
Updated: Aug 17, 2023
Don't fear the dead, they have left only words. The living are with you indeed.
I've a feeling that might be a famous quote - or I may have just made it up. Either way, fact or fiction, it makes an intriguing chapter opening or character introduction.
I like choosing names. It's something I'm rarely stuck on. If anything, I have the opposite problem - too many to choose from. For me, the question is not what to select, but how to pick.
Something unusual? A name that's special to you as the writer? A name that defines your character? Or something completely and totally random- there are name generator tools for that if you really can't decide. And let's face it, the choice is unlimited (within reason).
If your protagonist is a blond archeologist for example, how would Red Bracie, or Dug Ticker sound? How do you choose? How do you know what's right? Does it matter?
First impressions count. Many books, especially children's ones, echo similar names inside and out - ever noticed there are many stories with Sams and Daves or The Boy Who... on the cover. Ask yourself this: do you want your character to join this curious melee, or stand out and make your reader curious. Think about that.
Of course, you could end up causing reader distraction, with an unusual spelling. Say, an unpronounceable heroine like:
Niamh Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch*
Certainly unforgettable, but with something this far out, you run the risk of halting the flow - your reader will either skip over the complicated that they can't get their tongue round, or spend so long trying every possible permutation that they give up and swap your story for something that doesn't need a DIY glossary.
My favourite place for character inspiration is the local churchyard. That might seem a dark place to start, until you discover headstones create flash fiction all of their own.
Try it - study the names, dates, inscriptions, monumental carvings and statuettes. Just watch out for weeping Angels... don't blink!
Graveyards offer peaceful anthologies of family and social history, if you look hard enough and learn how to read them. Question whether they say more about the person under the ground, or the person who laid the stone? Afterall, unless extremely well organised in forward planning, who designs and orders their own epitaph? And if so, how would you want to be remembered? What would you include or leave out? Perish the thought of being asked to write your own obituary.
Brrr... this is getting a little morbid now, but don't let that put you off exploring. Tread carefully and be respectful of your elders. Their ancestry might leave you with more to query than resolve, but surely all good stories start with curiosity?
*(I haven't made that up, honest! It's the name of a place in Wales. Google it! I suggest you copy and paste though).