Start a Story with this Scene

To start a story with this scene, I’m going to repeat an exercise I used in some writing prompts a couple of years ago. Look at the scene and imagine what you as the character see, hear, feel, smell, and taste. Make a list like the one below.

  • Sights–Dark, the full moon throws weird shadows and odd silver light
  • Sounds–hushed, still, creepy quiet, drips from soaked pine trees
  • Touch–cold, damp, no wind
  • Smells–dampness, maybe musty, cold enough to make your nose run, pine
  • Taste–?

Now that you have a list of sensations, you can select which ones you want to build into your description to set the scene as you start your story. Here’s mine.

My steps sounded like thunder claps as every time I broke a stick on the dirt path. The air was still. Not a breath of wind. The woods were eerily quiet too. No scurrying animals or bird calls. Only the steady drip from the drenched pine needles.

The light of the full moon was eerie too, layering a silver light over every edge that made the entire forest look not quite real.

No wonder a full moon night was supposed to be the only night the castle appeared.

Your turn. How would you start a story with this scene?

For more prompt for speculative fiction, click here.

Start a Story with a Plot

You know you want to write a story and you have a killer plot twist–what if one identical twin betrays the other in some way? Betrayal is a powerful plot device, and you think having one twin turn on the other makes it even more powerful. You’re not sure if the betrayal comes at the beginning, middle, or end, but it’s pivotal to the story. But that plot twist is all you have so far. How do you start a story with a plot? I have some suggestions to provide inspiration.

Since we are dealing with betrayal, this plot point can take one of two general flavors …

Epic or Everyday?

Do you want the bad twin to betray the good one to a merciless wizard who is attacking the magical kingdom of which the good twin is the queen? Or do you want the bad twin to betray the good one to the Nazis as they try to escape occupied France? Or does the bad twin betray the good one by stealing her husband in present-day Los Angeles?

Deciding whether the betrayal fits within an epic story or an everyday one will make huge strides in helping you decide the shape of your story. One way to choose is to look at what you enjoy reading. If your favorite stories are epic adventures of fantasy, then you will have the most success writing in that genre since you know it so well. If you love historical fiction, select a favorite time in history and research it.

Who are the Characters?

You know your main characters are identical twins. So uncovering their family history is critical for their development. Are they male or female twins? Which parent do they resemble? Act like? For the betrayal to mean anything, they have to be close and not just because they are identical twins. What makes them close? A shared interest or talent? A traumatic past?

Once you’ve established a bit of their past, dive into their personalities. Even if they are identical twins, they have differences. What are they? Do these differences lead to the betrayal?

Where do these Characters Live?

What would be a good setting for this betrayal? I’ve already mentioned a magical kingdom, Nazi-occupied France, and current-day Los Angeles. What kind of people inhabit each of these settings? If the characters are human, then at their core, there’s something common to them, regardless of setting. But how can these or other settings influence the people the twins have become?

When choosing major settings, you only have to concern yourself with this one question: is the setting one you know or would like to know? Never pick a major setting you have no interest in. For example, let’s say you choose to set your story in Nazi-occupied France because you think that will give your betrayal added depth. But you haven’t read much historical fiction, don’t care much for France, and loathe history research. Your story will never get past the idea stage.

Selecting settings you know personally well or are eager to research will make writing your story much less of a chore and provide ideas on how the topography, climate, weather, architecture, history and local inhabitants will affect the plot.

For more inspiration on plotting, click here.

How do you start a story with a plot?

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