Let’s play! Some fast and fun writing games to try.


Moira Butterfield
  I’m in the midst of writing something that’s pretty off-the-wall at the moment. I hope it’s funny. It’s meant to be, and to do it I have to get into a different mindset away from my everyday concerns. To get into ‘anything goes’ mode I need to free up my thinking, so I’ve made a list of quick writing games to try at the beginning of writing sessions. I thought you might like a list, too, to have handy whenever you fancy a bit of writing play. I think of it as taking a lovely warm cleansing brain shower! Use the games to kickstart any kind of writing, from picture books upwards. Tailor them to suit.
In general the idea is to chuck away what you’ve written as it’s for pure fun, but if you decide you’ve hit on something, then good luck!
Add your own suggestions and favourites in the comments section and I’ll then create a document of creative writing games that we can all share as a writing resource in the free download section of this blog. When it’s ready we’ll tweet about it on @PictureBookDen.
I’ve found some of the game suggestions online. A couple I’ve experienced in workshops and a couple I’ve made up for myself. I haven’t tried them all yet, so I’ll be working through them and perhaps tweaking them a bit. I’ve not put them in any particular order, but I’ve given them my own names.
As a rule of thumb I reckon that none of these should take longer than it takes to sit and drink a cup of coffee. 
* Story photobomb Grab a magazine or a catalogue that you’ve got lying around. Open it and select a photo (do this really quickly - no going through the pages and making involved decisions). Now write one paragraph of story about it (for any age you like, depending on how you feel). Stop after 5 minutes (you could put your phone alarm on to stop yourself). 
* Snake eats bus Write down the numbers 1 to 12. Now quickly write the name of a character by 1. Then write a plot sentence by each number, taking this character onwards. It doesn’t have to be good because nobody is going to see it. It can be as mad as anything. That’ll be all the more fun for your brain. Here’s one I’ve just started quickly for the blog, as an example.  1.snake 2. eats bus 3. bus keeps driving 4. snake has to go where bus goes.      
You get the idea.  *  Brain takeover Open a book or a magazine. Choose a simple everyday word (point at one randomly with your finger). For just a couple of minutes at most write down lots of other ways of describing that word, and gradually just let yourself go off in any direction. Go as off-the-wall as you want. I’ve just done one quickly, and I began by pointing to ‘no one’. No one, nobody, no person, nix persona, lots of twos, all alone, no humans, hold on, there’s an alien, does that count? so if someone said ‘there was nobody there’ but there was an alien were they lying or not? I went an unusual way and ended up with a fun idea for a sci-fi short story (which I will probably never write but who knows).  *  Head yogaThis exercise comes from a psychologist, to encourage ‘thinking fluency and flexibility’ apparently. Maybe we need to keep exercising our brains this way to keep them flexible, hence my title. 
Begin by choosing a four-letter word. (The example I saw was IDEA). Now write three or four sentences using the four letters as word initials. Eg: I Don’t Enjoy ApricotsIf Dogfish Eat ApplesInterview Didn’t End AngrilyIndia Elephants Dawn Attack  
Then swap for another four letter word. It doesn’t matter one bit if your sentences are nonsense. It’s the word association that’s the brain-stretching part. *  Eureka writing Varying the words in a given phrase can bring about exciting problem-solving  breakthroughs and once led to a man inventing an entirely new type of food (a microwaveable egg cube). Or so I read in Thinkertoys. A handbook of creative-thinking technique, by Michael Michalko.His book is about solving problems using creative thinking, but I’ve adapted the idea to make it purely for fun. 

Write a simple sentence or find one from a picture book. Spend a little time substituting new words for the key words in the sentence. Do it fast. Here’s one I just tried: a teddy loses a hata dog finds a hat a hat finds a doga girl finds a dog
a girl finds a hat
with a teddy in it  I think I’d be happy to do this all day! It’s oddly soothing and it could go anywhere. The sentences could get longer or you could start a new sentence. It's your game! * DescribotronQuickly choose a noun, any noun. Spend five moments writing one word to describe it, thus: Door - big door, blue door, rotten door, ancient door, metal door, cold metal door Don’t give up if it gets hard, Just allow yourself to go a bit crazy:jelly door, talking door, lizard door (No idea where that lizard door came from!). * I’m little and I like…Make quick lists of three things you loved as a child: Food SmellsPlacesToys Pieces of clothing Activities Mmm, I’m thinking of the smell of clean sheets that billowed all day on the line…
*  AlphabonkersWrite the letters of the alphabet down. Then write a word by each letter that’s as silly and as personal as you like (it’s for you, nobody else). I’ve got one on my wall that says g for gaullimaufry!  It was created by Peter Chasseaud at his Tom Paine Printing Press in Lewes, Sussex, and I've got it on my wall, handprinted on lovely handmade paper. Here it is for some inspiration.

That’s it from me. Over to you. Have big fun and it'd be great if you added your own favourite writing game below.
Moira Butterfield  www.moirabutterfield.comNew picture book series: My Feelings. Published by Wayland.  
 






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Published on October 12, 2014 01:42
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