I practice writing. A lot.
I write throwaway stories. I write stories with goals to practice things like dialogue or action or group conversations.
The tales of THE HATCHBACK WOMAN began only as an exercise. I set a goal to write 10 short stories using a formula. Each story had to fulfill the formula in different ways.
The original formula to any HATCHBACK WOMAN tale was:
- Character receives an item from the HATCHBACK WOMAN.
- The item has a magical power.
- The use of the item changes the character’s life.
Pretty simple, but not when you have to come up with ten stories (or the ongoing case of HATCHBACK WOMAN, where I’m over 30 tales as of this writing).
For #1 I came up with: theft, found, given, left in new character’s possession, rewarded, demanded, offered a choice, given by a person other than the HATCHBACK WOMAN and a few variations, like dug up after witnessing her bury something.
For #2, I tried to think of different superpowers. Whatever I could think of, from invisibility to fire power and control over time.
For #3, I tried to vary how the item affected the character. Did it make their life better or worse? The character ended up deciding this each time. And it’s what I ended up loving about writing the HATCHBACK WOMAN tales. It was hard to know if she was good or evil or if it was the character’s choice.
I’ve written a few HATCHBACK WOMAN tales that failed. But practice makes perfect, and sometimes, I just needed to change up who the character was that received the item or how they received it.
Setting formulas gives us a chance to change up what we’re brainstorming.
Instead of trying to come up with an original idea, we’re asking ‘how do we make this different than what others have read?’
Want other ideas on how you could write? I’ve got more, every LAST WEDNESDAY of EVERY MONTH.