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Monday, May 14, 2012

Writing Prod

            I hesitated presenting today’s item because I don’t know that I would classify it as a writing prompt as much as I would a plot generator. The difference is probably small and as you can tell I decided to go ahead with it anyway.
            This plot generator is very similar to the Mix and Mesh writing prompt I discussed a couple of weeks ago. I call this one the Fairytale Cocktail. (Pretty catchy if you ask me.) One of my creative writing teachers turned me on to this method of brainstorming plots. And while I haven’t written a story using this method two of my writer friends use it frequently to create some fun stories.
            The idea is simple. Pick a fairytale and transport it to a new time and location. Obviously, you want to change it up a bit and decide how the setting would affect how the story is told. Because of that it becomes a brand new story. For instance, what would happen if you took Hansel and Gretel and placed them in a wild west frontier town? Hank and Gertie might be captured by a mystic Indian medicine-man which will change the dynamics of the story immensely while still giving you a good starting place for the plot.
            Something else you can do with this concept is change the characters in the story. I would still recommend making some slight setting changes as well, but what would happen if Little Red Riding Hood climbed up the beanstalk? And you don’t have to stick to fairytales either. Imagine Dennis the Menace taking a basket of goodies to his grandmother across town.
            If you don’t write cutesy fairytales this method can still produce some useable starter material. Take the story of Sleeping Beauty and turn it into a dystopian, science-fiction nightmare. Wouldn’t that be a kick?
            Despite the name I invented for this method don’t feel that you have to harvest fairytales as the base structure for your adapted story. Use a classic novel and make it your own. In fact, this is what I am going to do for my example.


Monsters on the Midway

Based loosely on Frankenstein this novel chronicles the story of a college football coach who is obsessed with creating the perfect football team. He introduces a new method of training the players that takes them beyond their normal limits and transforms them into machines of flesh and bone. Unfortunately, this training affects their lives outside the football stadium. Seeing his mistake he attempts to step-down as the team’s coach, but the team has other ideas about that. They begin a psychological terror campaign designed to keep the coach in place and continue their inhuman training.

10 comments:

  1. This sounds about who the author of Cinder came up with her novel. She did a sort of "imagine Cinderella running away from Prince Charming except her whole foot fell off" sort of take.

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    1. Yep. I can't take credit for coming up with this idea just for the googy name I applied to it. Look at last year's new television series about fairy tales. That is pretty much this concept at work and made commercially viable. It is definately a method of story generating that allows you to skip having to come up with the overriding plot.

      It still takes a lot of creativity to develop into a story that is your own. And even if it is mostly recognizeable as a derivative of the original fairytale people enjoy a creative retelling of an old classic.

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    2. I had a wonderful discussion with another blogger about a fairy tale something that hit me in the head, figuratively, not literally. I've got to get on the story idea before I see it on the shelves because someone else jumped to it before I did.

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    3. Awesome. Good writing to you.

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  2. LOVE this idea generator and you new take on Frankenstein! Thanks for sharing :)

    P.S. I would totally read Sleeping Beauty in a dystopian science-fiction nightmare :)

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    1. Thank you.

      As for this method of plot generating - it's fantastic. When I was taught this in college I used Frankenstein for my assignment and came up with a completely different story than the one I posted here.

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  3. What a fun idea, and I love that take on Frankenstein. You can do so much with classic story ideas if you switch things around a bit!

    And just wanted to say, since I never got the chance to, that it was great to meet you at Storymakers!

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    1. Absolutely. And it is possible to switch things around so that it doesn't resemble the original story very much.

      Ditto. Thanks for stopping by the blog. It was great meeting you.

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  4. Wow. Interesting twist on the Frankenstein story. Very intrigued!

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    1. I give most of the credit to Mary Shelley who created a very strong story. There are several levels to the story but the "I've created a monster and now I don't know what to do" concept really resonates with all of us.

      Still, thank you very much. It would be a great story and I am more than happy to give permission to use it to anyone who would like to write it. Just make sure I get a free signed copy.

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