The Secret To Writing: Finding Ideas

 

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How to Find Ideas for a Story

I wish I could tell you that there was an easy way or share some secret to discovering ideas.  However that isn’t the case.

Ideas are a dime a dozen. It is the execution that matters.
Frank Herbert

I remember reading something similar by Anne Rice. I don’t know that I believe that ideas are a dime a dozen though.

Right now I have 4 “good” ideas for stories, and then I have a graveyard of stories.  The things in my graveyard aren’t bad, however I don’t have inspiration to do anything with theme.

From my own experience, the way I get ideas and inspiration is by playing with a concept of thought.

The idea for my novel C.I.S. (Chance in Space) came from the Mars Needs Women Trope. I think I’ve read all the books that have this trope as it is one of my favorites.  However there came a point where I read all the books.

If there’s a book you really want to read, but it hasn’t been written yet, then you must write it.
Toni Morrison

This quote is inspirational. If you are someone that falls in the category you should try it.

This is how C.I.S. was born. I started with the trope and I started playing in my new sandbox.  I asked myself basic questions like who where the main characters, and what did I want to show in the story.

Everything after that was very organic, and flowed naturally.

My original idea for the story was very different to what I have planned now. I planned to have 1 book that followed 3 sisters who found themselves on a galactic mail-order bride spaceship.

However the part of the spark that inspired me was the story behind a mail-order bride service. I wrote this backstory for that, and before I knew it I have created a universe and world to play in. I like it and thought that I could write more stories that took place in the same universe.

I knew for myself I wanted to show the struggle of cultural differences and show the assimilation some goes through when the move to a new place.  So I decided to create cultures based around mythical creatures.

My book doesn’t have a Fantasy element, but there is a theme.  For example the story I finished was based around Mermaids. I wanted the culture to be the origins of the mermaid myths.

My time abroad has shown me that stereotype seem to derive from cultural misunderstandings, which is something I wanted to express in my story. If want to see how I do it, then you will have to buy my book when it is finished.

There is no right or wrong way to find and idea or write a story. This way works for me. Maybe it can work for you, but if it doesn’t then you’ve found 1 way not to come up with ideas. You will just need experiment to see what works best.

I hope you find this useful.
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~KD

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4 thoughts on “The Secret To Writing: Finding Ideas

  1. Oh, let me tell you: mind mapping is MAGICAL. Having an infinite canvas to sprawl, explore and break down ideas is what gets me through the day.

    Mind maps work great for me for ideation, too. When I was planning my last urban fantasy, I mapped out a bunch of mundane settings, and mundane crimes, and weird magical abilities, and then I started to see connections between them that I loved.

    A close second to that for me is free writing. I’ve done a lot of that the past two nights. I’ve had a couple of plot problems I needed to understand, and I just wrote stream-of-consciousness about them. Amongst the blather, I found a few seeds of good ideas. Those seeds get planted in a mind map to deeply explore, and — boom! — it’s coming together!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. It is so wicked of you to tease me! I am so excited about your story it sound incredible.

      I learned about free writing during NaNo and I feel it can be a great tool for when you are stuck.

      I don’t know if you had this same problem, but at least for my I really like what I wrote. At the time of writing I knew the scenes didn’t fit well in the story but I just wrote and figured that was future me’s problem.

      Future me hates past me right now. Some of the fixes are easy enough, but other scenes are so great that I need to rewrite chapters or redo them just to make them work.

      BTW how far along are you? I feel like you are a fast writer (faster than me at least) but I could be wrong.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Thank you for the confidence! I hope my story can live up to the hype! 🤓

        Don’t be disheartened about your first draft needing work! It’s only the *first* draft — it’s supposed to need work. It’s totally natural!

        And I’m probably not nearly as far along as you think I am! The first book in the series is still in the planning and outlining stage. I *need* to work from an outline, so I can be sure I’ve got all my arcs and foreshadowing in place. So, the story is progressing — but the word count ain’t. 🙃

        Like

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