The latest prompt from storyaday.org is below. For the other prompts given this month see the SADM 2014 page.
We’ve looked at the parts of the story. We’ve looked at point of view. We’ve learned the rules. Now I’m inviting you to throw it all out of the window.
Write A Non-Linear Story
Tips:
- Today you’ll write a story that does not go from beginning to middle to end.
- There is no need whatsoever to mollycoddle your reader and write a coherent series of events.
- Try jumping around in time (feel free to retell a story you’ve previously written, to help you get a headstart on this assignment)
- Think about writing a stream-of-consciousness monologue, which contains narrative strands, only not necessarily in a traditional narrative way.
- Tell the story backwards (think about Memento; Looper; , the story arc of River Song from Doctor Who).
- Paint random scenes. Make no attempt to tell a traditional narrative story. Just tell it how your character sees things (think: The Time Traveller’s Wife). This is particularly effective for harrowing stories or if you really want to disorient your readers (There was a famous British modernist composer, Sir Peter Maxwell Davies, whose works were unapologetically ‘difficult’. “I work hard to write them,” ‘Max’ was known to say. “Why shouldn’t my audience work hard too?”).
GO!
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