Writing Ideas # 2: Junk Mail

This is the second posting in a series of 5 related topics. If you missed the first one, you can find it HERE.

I subscribe to the Writer’s Digest newsletter and get emails from time to time about writing ideas. I got such an email with ‘5 Ways to Come Up With Great Story Ideas’. So, I have decided to post each of the prompts and my response.

If you want to sign up for the Writer’s Digest email newsletter, just visit their website HERE to register.

Number 2

So, here goes the second one:

The Prompt:

Take the next two pieces of spam mail you receive (either snail mail or e-mail) and use it to determine the profession on your protagonist and your protagonist’s love interest. I get this type of mail all of the time, particularly from politicians, credit card companies and auto dealerships-and that’s just what’s delivered by the United States Postal Service! When I add in the junk sent to my e-mail inbox, I get “foreign ambassadors from Nigeria” looking for million dollar loans and women begging me to click through to get “erotic” pictures of them. Any one of these jobs will lead to many fun and unusual situations-and will give you plenty of fodder to write about.

My Response:

I decided to look at the first piece of junk snail mail I put my hand on and the first piece of junk email in my spam box. So I got an offer for personal insurance and an email about purchasing a new software product.

So I decided that my male character would be an Insurance salesman and the female character would be a software programmer. My female character goes in to purchase renter’s insurance from the male character. Let’s call them Joy and Ben. Joy is flustered when she goes into the office because she can’t really afford renter’s insurance. Sure, she’s a programmer, but she’s new so she doesn’t make a lot of money yet. Ben is taken by her but also threatened by her intelligence. Sounds like the making of a good romance, huh?

So what do you think? Try the prompt yourself and see what you can come up with! Share your link in the comment section below so I can read yours too. 🙂

Happy Writing!

And don’t forget to subscribe to Writer’s Digest Magazine or the FREE email newsletter!

Writing

Today’s OneWord: Cool

Protecting her bare skin from the cool night air, Aaron draped his jacket over Holly’s shoulders.

She looked up and smiled vaguely at him as they walked on the boardwalk.

“You gonna tell me what’s on your mind?” He asked gently.

“No.” She said quietly. “I don’t even want to know what’s on my mind, Aaron. Why would I burden you with it as well?”

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Smashwords

For those of you Indie authors out there who are seeking to self-publish, I want to share a website with you called Smashwords.

Smashwords is a site where you can publish your eBook or other content to multiple retail outlets at once. Smashwords allows you to distribute your work to the Apple iBookstore which serves over 50 countries, Barnes & Noble, Kobo (which powers other retailers as well), Sony, Baker & Taylor (which serves Blio.com and the Axis360 public library platform), and the Diesel eBook Store.

Smashwords offers many tools and opportunities for those wishing to self-publish their work. Among the tools offered are:

  • We make it fast, free and easy to publish an ebook!
  • World’s largest indie ebook distributor
  • 185,000+ titles published by 50,000+ authors and publishers
  • 85% net back to the author/publisher/agent
  • Upload your book once and enjoy distribution to multiple retailers.  Spend more time writing and less time managing multiple retailer platforms.
  • We provide simple, step-by-step instructions that make it free and easy for anyone to create, publish and distribute an ebook.
  • Distribution to libraries
  • FREE ISBNs
  • FREE ebook conversion to nine formats from a Word .doc
  • FREE unlimited anytime-updates to book and metadata
  • FREE consolidated sales reporting simplifies year-end tax reporting
  • FREE centralized metadata management
  • FREE exclusive marketing and selling tools such as our Smashwords Coupon Manager!

Smashwords allows any genre and the following formats:

  • Personal Memoirs
  • Short Fiction
  • Long Fiction
  • Essays
  • Poetry
  • Screenplays
  • Anything else you can write in a word processor!

Registering for a Smashwords account and publishing with them is free, so you don’t have to worry about being charged. You keep all the rights to your material and the publishing option with Smashwords is non-exclusive.

You can publish in Amazon and Smashwords both provided you are not using the Direct option with Amazon which has specific requirements.

Read more about Smashwords here: Smashwords Q & A

They have a Smashwords Style Guide which you can download free: Smashwords Style Guide

Smashwords also offers free books on:

The Secrets to ePublishing Success

Smashwords Book Marketing Guide

and more! Sign up for a free Smashwords account to gain access to their free tools and tips as well as publish your work.

Sign Up for Smashwords

Smashwords

Today’s OneWord: Speak

His mouth opened and closed like a fish gasping for air. His skin felt hot and his pants suddenly felt too tight around his stomach. He couldn’t speak as the foam in his lungs gathered in his mouth and blocked his airways.

As his vision began to blur and go dark, he struggle to question.

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Today’s OneWord: Sweep

Anna walked into the kitchen and instantly knew she had interrupted something. Being a low-level servant was never fun, but when you walked in on something you shouldn’t be hearing, it could mean losing your job.

Maggie, the head house maid, scowled at Anna and barked at her.

“Go sweep the courtyard!”

Throwing a finger into the air in the direction of the courtyard as if Anna was a dullard and didn’t know where it was, Maggie glared at her until she left the room.

As she walked out, Anna was sure she heard the name of Lady Jane mentioned in undertones.

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Fiction Files: Fly

This is a short story I wrote several years ago. I thought I might share it here. Let me know what you think! 🙂

Fly

I stood on the edge of a bridge; where my simple dream began. I could often be found perched precariously, with a skinny leg wrapped around a steel support pole and a hand grasping a cord above me. I would swing over the edge of the structure, suspended in air. The windy days were my favorite, because it would toss my pale hair and tug at my shirt, giving me the illusion of rushing through the sky. The air would move around me, shaping itself to my body that was speeding through time and space within the confines of my young imagination.

As long as I could remember, I had wanted to fly. Watching television, I was mesmerized by the cartoon characters that could soar in the skies. Superman and Batman, who could fly with only the aid of a flimsy cape, entranced me. I vowed that someday, I too, would fly.

When my brother, Travis, went into the Air Force, I discovered a real life hero. He would write to tell me about his training and what new things he had learned about being a pilot. Through the years of his absence, the letters from around the world became the lifeline to my dream. I would race home from school to check the basket inside the front door of our house, to see if he had sent me a new letter. If there was a foreign envelope, I would shriek with joy and run up the stairs to my room. I would sit on my bed and open the letter carefully. Savoring each word to myself, I would read it over and over as he described the feeling of flying with the birds. My older brother was my best friend and the only person that knew of my dream to be a pilot.

My fascination grew with the years and I began to lay my secret plans to become a pilot in my brother’s footsteps. Knowing my parents would never approve, I kept it to myself. I sent for enlistment information and began studying the tests I would take to become a pilot. I read all the books I could get my greedy hands on that talked about the science of flying an airplane. I finally completed the papers and sent them, telling the local recruiter I would be in on my birthday. I circled the happy day on my calendar, the day I would turn eighteen and I could take myself down to the recruiting office and sign my name.

The days seemed to pass like molasses, plodding and drudging along. Each hour seemed an eternity until I could give my soul to the air. I became impatient. My Mother said I was acting strangely and often watched me close enough to be my shadow. I would just hug her close and tell her I loved her and that everything was okay, I was just growing up. She would get teary-eyed, as emotional women tend to do and would leave me alone until it once again occurred to her that I was ‘acting strangely’.

The eighteenth celebration of my birth was finally upon me. I had planned to be up and gone before anyone was aware of what I was doing. Rising early and making my way to the kitchen, I was surprised to see my parents already there. They were sitting together, with some papers on the table before them. They spoke quietly to each other, and I heard them say my name. Standing still in the doorway, I waited for them to notice me. My Mother raised her head and I could see she had been crying.

I stood in silence, waiting for one of them to speak. My Father took a slow breath and blew it out. My Mother’s eyes were so sad, defeated, like she had to finally give up on something she had worked so hard for. Carefully, my Father arranged the papers in front of him and looked up at me. With a hand that had both swatted and comforted me, he motioned to the chair across from him and my Mother.

I don’t remember walking to the chair; don’t recall pulling it out and sitting down. The exact moment of his speech does not replay in my fragmented memories of that day, that morning. I don’t remember what he was wearing or whether he had brushed his hair or not. The words are what keep tumbling around, bouncing off the sides of my skull and knocking against one another in my mind, making a terrible clatter that I could not quiet. His pity and my Mother’s sympathy, as if I were a mentally handicapped child trying to perform calculus, were what struck me the hardest. I had always believed that I could do anything and this was the first time that I learned I was the only one who thought that way.

Moving my auburn eyes from my Father’s face to my Mother, time slowed. A tear, moving without sense of time and gravity, slid down the soft cheek of her face. Her eyes, blue like the sky, were temporarily masked by her sooty lashes, reminding me of a storm cloud covering the summer sky. All at once, I could hear their breathing, see their chests rising and falling with each intake of breath. The tear fell onto the paper in front of her, splashing on the ink like a huge drop of rain in a small pool of motor oil.

“You know you can’t, right?” Her soft question exploded on me like the bomb at Hiroshima, shattering my dream into a thousand shards of glass. The tear was joined by more. They were pouring down her face now. Her shoulders shook and she covered her face with a slim hand, her diamond wedding rings flashing in the light of the overhead lamp.

I just looked at them blankly. Hoping and praying they were not saying what I knew they were. I opened my mouth and closed it again, without uttering a sound. My eyes stung and the proverbial lump clumped in my throat. I swallowed, bit my lip and continued to stare at them. Waiting for one of them to say plainly what I was dreading.

“They called us. Told us you sent in the paperwork to . . .” he paused, swallowed and continued, “to be a . . . a pilot.”

I just looked at him. The words entering my ears were not registering. They were sounds, fighting with the pounding waves of my despair, to be heard. I pushed the lump down again, wanting him to smile and laugh and tell me there was some mistake, that this was a birthday prank. His lips pressed tightly together, a sign that he was not pleased. He lowered his eyes to the papers on the table top. He took another deep breath. Exhaling, he brought his eyes up to meet mine and I was startled to see there were tears there. Those tears in my Father’s eyes, said all that he could not. They didn’t believe I could do it. They didn’t believe in me.

Suddenly, I was running from the house. My Father’s shout followed me into the front yard, but was lost in the rushing sound of the wind in my ears. My feet pounded the pavement, carrying my wretched body onward. Looking down, I cursed, seeing the source of my sadness. The genetic deformity that would not allow me to fulfill my dreams. The leg that was not a leg at all. It worked fine, carrying me further and further from the words that were never said, but echoed in my mind. They had created a leg for me where one had not grown, a false limb. Using new technologies that were still being tested, they had given me the gift of movement by attaching the metal to my bone. I could walk, run, and dance. I could do anything anyone born with two legs could do and probably better, but I could not do this. I could not be a pilot. Would never be a pilot. The reality of my broken dream burst like a ruptured vessel in my chest. The coldness spread through my body like a web of despair.

I ran onward, letting my tears fall freely. The speed of my movement splashed the tears along my cheeks like the rain in a storm, splattering against unforgiving panes of glass. I did not notice where I was going until I was there. I slowed my pace; my breath was coming in ragged gasps. I leaned over, hands on my knees, one knobby and one metal, gaining my breath once more. I straightened, and walking to the bridge, I stood as close to the edge as I could get. I wrapped my leg around a steel support pole and grasped the cord that hung down above me. Breathing easy now, I closed my eyes, swinging out over the empty space where the wind could dry my tears and I could fly.

Fly

Writing Ideas # 1: Scene from a book

I’m always on the lookout for fantastic writing ideas, inspiration, prompts or other tools to give me a kick start when I can’t think of anything to write or I’m stuck in a story or book. I subscribe to the Writer’s Digest newsletter and get emails from time to time about writing ideas. I got such an email this morning with ‘5 Ways to Come Up With Great Story Ideas’. So, I have decided to post each of the prompts and my response.

If you want to sign up for the Writer’s Digest email newsletter, just visit their website HERE to register.

Number 1

So, here goes the first one:

The Prompt:
Take a very small, seemingly non-important scene from one of your favorite books and consider what it’d be like if that were the opening scene to your novel. Change the characters of course, and add one or more unique elements to that scene. The key is to give you a starting point and then let your imagination run wild. While there are many ways to stay inspired, this challenge really takes something that you love (an old book) and gives it new life.

My Response:

One of my favorite books is The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas. If you are not familiar with it, it is a very old story, written around 1844. One of my very favorite scenes of the book (although I have many favorite parts) is when the main character, Edmond Dantes, escapes from his island prison by posing as the dead body of a fellow inmate and friend, Abbe Faria. Below is the actual passage from the book:

“And at the same instant Dantes felt himself flung into the air like a wounded bird, falling, falling with a rapidity that made his blood curdle. Although drawn downwards by the heavy weight which hastened his rapid descent, it seemed to him as if the fall lasted for a century. At last, with a horrible splash, he darted like an arrow into the ice-cold water, and as he did so he uttered a shrill cry, stifled in a moment by his immersion beneath the waves.”

And here is how I would re-write it to portray an opening scene of a book.

Suddenly finding consciousness, Matthew found himself in the dark. He was moving, but did not know how. It was as if he were being carried by rough hands, but he could not see anything, could not move his body. He heard voices, they were speaking of a cemetery and having a bite to eat after they were done there. Matthew sensed the danger that surrounded him in his blind cocoon and so he remained silent. Feeling carefully with his hands which were restrained with course twine, Matthew concluded that he was in a sack of some kind, like a bundle of potatoes. Suddenly, the men carrying him slowed. He became aware of the sound of the sea very close to them and could smell the brine through the cloth that bound him. The men began swinging him back and forth and at the count of three, Matthew was airborne. He felt himself flying through the air, the cold, moist sea air swirled all around his fiber prison. Plummeting like a rock, Matthew wondered if his flight would ever end. And just when he thought he would never touch the earth again, his body was shocked with the freezing cold temperatures of the icy sea. Sinking like a stone, Matthew frantically began writhing to escape, his lungs already beginning to burn and ache.

So what do you think? Try the prompt yourself and see what you can come up with! Share your link in the comment section below so I can read yours too. 🙂

Happy Writing!

And don’t forget to subscribe to Writer’s Digest Magazine or the FREE email newsletter!

Writing

Today’s OneWord: Master

I was the master of my domain. I was in charge of all the lands that lay out before me. I strode to the top of the hill to get a better look. The birds soared around the hill as if paying homage to their new king. I took a deep breath and nearly choked.

“Frank!” A voice yelled up at me.

“Hey Frank, get the hell off of there! We need to doze it.”

I grabbed my hard hat and surfed down the rubbish heap on a cardboard box.

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