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  >> Static Item >> Article >> Young Adult >> ID #1377716  |   Show DetailsPrinter Friendly PageTell A Friend
 How Authors Get Story Ideas
This is the second in a series of articles about fiction writing aimed at young writers.
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During the final rewrite phase of my novel, Misfit McCabe, leading up to publication, I worked with a class of young readers to preview the manuscript and provide feedback. This is the second in a series of articles about fiction writing aimed at young writers. How Authors Get Story Ideas attempts to partially answer a frequent question that all authors' are asked - where do the story ideas come from?

One of the questions that most fiction authors are asked at one point or another is "how did you get the idea for the story?" Sometimes this is a hard question to answer.

The easy answer is: LIFE

Actually, there are several ways in which an author can come up with an idea for a book.

Through reading or hearing about a current or past event. Maybe you read about a historical event and something about the situation intrigues you and you start imagining characters and how they deal with the events occurring. This can be through newspapers, something you see on TV, or even other books you read.

Visual imagery - You might see a picture that draws your attention and you can start building up a story about what happens in the picture. I still have one book that I haven't written where I came up with the idea in this very same way. I was visiting a friend's house and she had a picture on the wall of sketching of two girls and just looking at the picture, I started to imagine the story of what was happening in the life of those two girls. I even knew their names just by looking at the picture (Cassandra and Alexandra). I have jotted down my ideas for this story and one day will get around to writing it.

A setting - I once went to school in Owatonna, Minnesota, and realized that the school I went to would be a great setting for a story. I knew that my main character would be someone who was not used to having any rules enforced on her, and the school rules were very strict. This story will actually (when I finish it) cover the course of 3 books, because the story that I want to tell with it is too long for one book.

Daydreams - Sometimes your mind wanders off on its own and something you see or hear sparks a line of "what if" thinking or imagining and you realize that when you get through to the end of the "what if" that you have the basis for a story.

Dreams - Believe it or not, Misfit McCabe was the result of a dream that I had. When I woke up from my dream, I knew that I had the making of a story - I knew the beginning, the middle and the end. I didn't know all of the details of course, but the major points of the story were all there and all I had to do was write it.

Reading another story - Sometimes you read a story and think to yourself "that's not the way I'd write it", and then write your own version of the story. Or maybe it's just part of the story where you think an underlying part of the story was left out.

Study an author whose books you like. Identify what it is that you like about how they write. It's also important identify things that you don't like and know why. It helps you to avoid the same thing in your own work.

Some writers carry a notepad wherever they go so they can jot down ideas as they come up. Or they will keep a journal to at least write something down every day. The more you write, the better you can become.

The internet is like a cornucopia of ideas waiting to be found. Google or Yahoo writing prompts and you will find several exercises to give you ideas. Something like: Start with a character that has an unusual fear. What is the fear? How does the character react when he/she has to face that fear? If you start with an idea like that, you are well on your way to creating a story, as well as character development.

These are just a few of the ways in which you can come up with a story. Can you think of others?

The main thing to remember is that you shouldn't try to force yourself to come up with ideas. Sometimes the biggest obstacle to coming up with an idea is the fear of not being able to come up with an idea. Just relax and let your mind wander. Something will pop in sooner or later.

LK Gardner-Griffie is the author of young adult novel Misfit McCabe which is available now through Lulu.com , Barnes and Noble, and Amazon.com in paperback and as a Kindle edition at Amazon.com.

© Copyright 2008 LK Gardner-Griffie (UN: lkggrif at Writing.Com). All rights reserved.
LK Gardner-Griffie has granted Writing.Com, its affiliates and syndicates non-exclusive rights to display this work.

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