This year, I want to do something different.
I have a lot more going on now then when I started this. I started posting a bunch of poetry because it doesn’t take as long to write, but I’m not all that interested in continuing to write poetry. I mostly want to write fiction. Trying to write a decent story once a week just isn’t quite feasible anymore, so, for 2021, I’m going to be adding one story per month.
I’m leaving everything else about it rather open. I have some ideas for January, but I might not stick with them throughout the year. I want to come up with some new things to experiment with, after all.
To start with, I’ll be using some random word generators and writing prompts and go from there.
As usual, I’ll link to the stories below as they come out. I’ll also add a note about what technique I was experimenting with.
The Water Shine Persists – generated some random words and built a short scene around them.
ample acceptable amiability – randomly generated words as a foundation
a bothersome counterpoint derives eternity – I think this is called a pangram – first letter of each word cycles through the alphabet
the retreat ends – didn’t utilize any particular experiments with this, just tried to tie everything so far together into something more coherent
in the cave – this month was busy and dramatic, I ended up just connecting more dots from previous experiments
the land falls into the sea – this month was actually busier and more dramatic, so this was just stream-of-consciousness with very little editing
adequate fire in a cave or tunnel – this month, I hit the keyboard randomly, and then went back and looked for syllables/things that reminded me of words and shaped the writing around those found words
lily on the cliff – beginning with a title which was largely randomly generated, this month, I wanted to focus on a setting, but even that ends up taking on some narrative structure.
Cafe Ceiling – much like last month, I randomly generated a title, which gave me a vivid mental image, which I attempted to paint.
An Instant – bringing things together which were not originally intended to be connected
Collapsing – this began as a pangram poem, but using two words in a row with each letter instead of just one. It was then shaped into a more narrative structure, ending with a bit of stream-of-consciousness.
dreaming – a one sentence story to end with
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