Where Do You Get Your Ideas?
There is a handful of questions that every published author hears from time to time. One of the most frequent is, “Where do you get your ideas?” I usually give some smart aleck response like, “Over at Ideas-R-Us” or “Aisle 4 at Costco – cuz I need a lot of ideas.” If the actual question is, “Where do you get your ideas from?” I might say, “From behind the preposition at the end of that sentence.” But today I’ll try to actually answer that query.
THE NEWS – Most of the ideas for my crime novels and short stories come from newspapers and television newscasts. Despite their efforts to be objective, reporters can’t help but present some theories about crimes they report on. Whenever I hear that I like to play a “what if” game. What if that isn’t what happened at all? What if there’s a totally different motive? What if the witness (the arresting officer, the spouse) is lying? Then I spin a story from that. And it doesn’t have to be a crime story. Sometimes a creative journalist will report on someone just doing something weird or unexplained. I can make up a reason for the person to have base jumped from a city building or started a flash mob in the Metro that relates to a crime.
OTHER WRITERS – Sometimes another writer and I will brainstorm story ideas. This can be a lot of fun, each reacting to the other’s plot points with a lively, “and then THIS might happen” or, “but at the same time, across town THIS is going on.” We might leave that conversation with a clear story in mind, but the result is always that we go home and end up writing two very different stories that happen to take off from the same place. This can even happen when I’m reading someone else’s story. I might get to a point and say, “No no no… THAT’S not what happens next…” and then I’m off on a story all my own.
YOU – Story ideas often come up in unrelated conversations with friend and fans, and not even always in person. For example, in trying to be both funny and provocative, I posted this on Facebook recently:
“Why is a school zone 20 mph? That seems like the optimal cruising speed for pedophiles...”
Well, it did turn out to be a conversation starter, but among the responses was a friend’s post with evidence that the low speed limit might actually help stop the bad guys. It was a news story with this headline: Teens Chase Kidnapping Suspect on Bikes, save5-year old girl. Two teenage boys are being hailed as heroes after they chased a car carrying a kidnapped girl… on their bicycles. Depending on your audience it may or may not matter that the teens were African American and the little girl was white. But really… with a little imagination I could pull half a dozen good stories out of that little report. Couldn't you?
So that’s where I get MY story ideas. How about you? AND, if you’re a writer, what common questions do YOU get?
THE NEWS – Most of the ideas for my crime novels and short stories come from newspapers and television newscasts. Despite their efforts to be objective, reporters can’t help but present some theories about crimes they report on. Whenever I hear that I like to play a “what if” game. What if that isn’t what happened at all? What if there’s a totally different motive? What if the witness (the arresting officer, the spouse) is lying? Then I spin a story from that. And it doesn’t have to be a crime story. Sometimes a creative journalist will report on someone just doing something weird or unexplained. I can make up a reason for the person to have base jumped from a city building or started a flash mob in the Metro that relates to a crime.
OTHER WRITERS – Sometimes another writer and I will brainstorm story ideas. This can be a lot of fun, each reacting to the other’s plot points with a lively, “and then THIS might happen” or, “but at the same time, across town THIS is going on.” We might leave that conversation with a clear story in mind, but the result is always that we go home and end up writing two very different stories that happen to take off from the same place. This can even happen when I’m reading someone else’s story. I might get to a point and say, “No no no… THAT’S not what happens next…” and then I’m off on a story all my own.
YOU – Story ideas often come up in unrelated conversations with friend and fans, and not even always in person. For example, in trying to be both funny and provocative, I posted this on Facebook recently:
“Why is a school zone 20 mph? That seems like the optimal cruising speed for pedophiles...”
Well, it did turn out to be a conversation starter, but among the responses was a friend’s post with evidence that the low speed limit might actually help stop the bad guys. It was a news story with this headline: Teens Chase Kidnapping Suspect on Bikes, save5-year old girl. Two teenage boys are being hailed as heroes after they chased a car carrying a kidnapped girl… on their bicycles. Depending on your audience it may or may not matter that the teens were African American and the little girl was white. But really… with a little imagination I could pull half a dozen good stories out of that little report. Couldn't you?
So that’s where I get MY story ideas. How about you? AND, if you’re a writer, what common questions do YOU get?
Published on April 08, 2014 13:43
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