MOOD SWINGS

Creative Writing Exercise Mood Swings

Your character is in a terrible mood. What could possibly cheer them up?

SHOPPING LIST

Write a shopping list for the characters in your story

Write a shopping list for your character. What kind of things would they shop for on a weekly basis?

THE PROUST QUESTIONNAIRE

Use the Proust Questionnaire to create a backstory for your characters

The Proust Questionnaire has its origins in a parlour game popularized by Marcel Proust, the French essayist and novelist, who believed that, in answering these questions, an individual reveals his or her true nature.

FAIRYTALE PERSPECTIVE

Fairy tale writing exercise for creative writing course

Choose a famous fairytale or story. Choose one scene from this story and retell it in your own words. But this time you pick a different character to be the main character and you write the scene from their perspective.

EAVESDROP EXCURSION

eavesdropping on people's conversation will help you write natural dialogue

We have been taught in school to write in proper grammatically correct sentences. When you start writing dialogue this is the first thing you must unlearn. If you listen carefully most people don’t speak in complete and perfect sentences.

ARE YOU SITTING DOWN?

Your character receives an important phone call.

You character receives a phone call. The first thing the person on the other end of the line says is the classic sentence: “Are you sitting down?”

GOING PLACES!

Pick a place on the map and write about it

Grab a map or an atlas. Close your eyes and flip through the pages of the atlas, move your finger over the map and let it land somewhere. Where are you?

START WITH 8 OF 8

Stack of Books

Pick a book from your shelf. Go to page eight and then to line eight. Copy the sentence that starts on that line to the top of your page and use that as the first line of your story.