Prompt for January 29, 2014 – Day 29

Hey look, halfway through that pesky work week for the MTWThF crowd!  Two more days and we’ll be at the end of January.

Prompt Type: Opening Line

Prompt:  I saw him standing there at the counter by the pastry case, waiting for the barista to give him his cup of coffee.

Let’s see what you can do with that.  Feel free to change the gender of who your protagonist is seeing as needed.


Got a suggestion for a prompt? Contact Erin at emklitzke (at) gmail (dot) com.

Prompt for January 28, 2014 – Day 28

Almost at the end of January now, and in a few more days it’ll be one month down, 11 to go.

Another image prompt today, another picture I took on a lovely trip east to a place I’d go back to again if I had a chance to explore more of the city and take more pictures.

Prompt Type: Image prompt

Prompt:

Photo by Erin M. Klitzke
Photo by Erin M. Klitzke

Got a suggestion for a prompt? Contact Erin at emklitzke (at) gmail (dot) com.

Prompt for January 27, 2014 – Day 27

Oh Mondays.  I’m not a fan, are you?

Another day, another prompt!  More music today.

Prompt type: Music prompt

Prompt:

Music is “How to Save a Life” by The Fray. Video courtesy of YouTube.


Got a suggestion for a prompt? Contact Erin at emklitzke (at) gmail (dot) com.

Prompt for January 25, 2014 – Day 25

Happy Saturday!

Today brings a new prompt type (a character–specifically, your antagonist/villain–development prompt) and this one’s got a little bit of a backstory.

When I wrote the original (and I mean the original original) draft of what became the main line of the Epsilon universe (the stories with Aaron Taylor and Caren Flannery), I had put together a really awful villain.  The only thing interesting about him was that he was Aaron Taylor’s father and Aaron hated him with every fiber of his being.  He was a cardboard cutout of a mustache-twirling villain you see in parodies and bad B-movies.  As I matured as a writer (and an individual), I got to thinking: how the hell did Aaron Taylor’s sweet, loving mother end up having her son with a man that turned out to be some kind of monster by the end of my original story?  The more I thought about it, the deeper I had to climb into Daniel Taylor’s head–and the more I learned about my “villain.”  As it turns out, everything Daniel does is motivated by love.

I had a similar arc in developing the Drilin Imperium for the same universe.  The more I explored their history and development and moved away from the simple “evil empire” concept, the more I began to realize what motivated the people at the very highest levels of power and the deepest levels of conspiracy inside of what used to be the Earth Federation.  E-Fed was transformed from a Federation of worlds to a shell of its former self because of simple fear.

These types of thought processes bring me to today’s prompt, which is designed to help you develop your antagonists/villains for your own novels and stories.

 

Prompt Type: Character Development

Prompt:  Think about your antagonist/villain and what motivates them.  Boil it down to one vice or virtue–love, greed, envy, fear, hope, etc.–that drives what they do.

Now change it up.  How would your villain be different if love motivated them?  Write a character sketch or scene detailing how love motivates the actions of your antagonist/villain.


Got a suggestion for a prompt? Contact Erin at emklitzke (at) gmail (dot) com.

Prompt for January 23, 2014 – Day 23

I don’t know about all of you, but I spent a lot of time in high school and college being exposed to historical documents, both in their original languages and in translation.  One of the documents that I spent a lot of time with during both of those periods of my life is where today’s prompt comes from.

Prompt Type: Craft a scene

Prompt: Recreate the passage below in a new context–or in the same context, with characters imagined into the scene. Feel free to modify any gender, terminology, or name as needed.

The next day, early in the morning, he sent both foot-soldiers and horse in three divisions on an expedition to pursue those who had fled. These having advanced a little way, when already the rear [of the enemy] was in sight, some horse came to Caesar from Quintus Atrius, to report that the preceding night, a very great storm having arisen, almost all the ships were dashed to pieces and cast upon the shore, because neither the anchors and cables could resist, nor could the sailors and pilots sustain the violence of the storm; and thus great damage was received by that collision of the ships.

Text is from Caesar’s Gallic Wars, translation provided by The Internet Classics Archive, http://classics.mit.edu/index.html


Got a suggestion for a prompt? Contact Erin at emklitzke (at) gmail (dot) com.