# Wednesday, August 19, 2009
Mid-Week Prompt: Rejecting the Rejection

Hey writers,

Not too long ago, a strange thing happened in the storied submissions intake department of WD (my cluttered desk). In short, a writer pitched us a pretty solid idea, but we had run something similar in a previous issue, so I sent a polite “no,” and explained the situation.  

My e-mail pinged an hour later: “Can I reject this rejection?”

I sat there, brainstorming faux-clever responses galore, from the dashing one-liner to the form letter (a triple play!), and eventually X’d the e-mail out.

Still, I found it hilarious, and often wonder what her letter would have entailed, had it gone into greater depth.

Also, a tip of the prompt hat to Beth Cato, whose “That Strange Day” piece is this week’s Notable Story pick. Next week, guest judge/WD Editor Jessica Strawser and I will pick our favorite story for the monthly swag giveaway.

Have a great Wednesday,

Zachary

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PROMPT: Rejecting the Rejection
In 500 words or fewer, funny, sad or stirring:

You’ve had it. You can’t take it any more. You decide to reject a rejection letter.  



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Wednesday, August 19, 2009 5:09:06 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [8] 
# Monday, August 17, 2009
Your Monday Creativity Wake-Up Call: The Ultimate Secret
Hey writers,

I stumbled upon some old essays this weekend, and came across one of the most intriguing craft quotes I’ve ever read, courtesy of George Orwell and his piece “Why I Write”:

“Writing a book is a horrible, exhausting struggle, like a long bout of some painful illness. One would never undertake such a thing if one were not driven on by some demon whom one can neither resist nor understand.”

Thus, I revisited my haggard copy of 1984 and dug up an Orwellian Literary Roadshow prompt below.

Here’s to the writing angels and demons,

Zachary


PROMPT: The Ultimate Secret

In 500 words or fewer, funny, sad or stirring, write a story inspired by or containing the following (from Orwell’s 1984):

“Julia.”
No answer.
“Julia, are you awake?”
No answer. She was asleep. He shut the book, put it carefully on the floor, lay down, and pulled the coverlet over both of them.
He had still, he reflected, not learned the ultimate secret. He understood how; he did not understand why.


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Monday, August 17, 2009 5:55:04 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [5] 
# Friday, August 14, 2009
Your Weekend Prompt: Behind the Curtain

Hey writers,

Here’s to hoping your writing week treated you well. Attached below is a new prompt, if the creative urge so strikes you this Friday, Saturday or Sunday.

Have an excellent weekend laden with scores of It is decidedly sos (or, Reply hazy, try agains, depending on your preference),
 
Zachary


PROMPT: Behind the Curtain
In 500 words or fewer, funny, sad or stirring:

A fortune-teller rubs her glass orb and grabs your hand. She closes her eyes. She raises her head toward the sky and mumbles. Then, she bursts out laughing.

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If your prompt stomach continues to groan, check out The Writer's Book Of Matches: 1001 Prompts To Ignite Your Fiction, which was penned by a few of my friends at WD (Alice Pope and Scott Francis, et al.). Alice, who I forced into an overblown logline, promises you'll be basking in a raging inferno of writing genius.




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Friday, August 14, 2009 3:56:45 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [7] 
# Wednesday, August 12, 2009
Mid-Week Prompt: Things We Lost in the Flood

Hey writers,

Cincinnati weathered a bit of a flash flood Monday, and I answered the phone at WD to my mother panicking—sewage had bubbled up from a drain, and was streaming into her basement. My father and I held our breath and dove into the old goods—think antique candy, family photos, basset hound lawn ornaments, clothes, stacks of anonymous boxes—and hauled up the most worthy items for hospice in the garage.

In a flood situation, what would you save—or not? (I can assure you a few mid-80s chocolate rabbits met their demise.)

Also, a tip of the hat to Jared David's intriguing portrait from "Wherever You May Write," which is this week's Notable Story pick.

Yours in writing,

Zachary


PROMPT: Things We Lost in the Flood
In 500 words or fewer, funny, sad or stirring:

Your home floods. You race to save one item, but at the last minute, change your mind.


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Wednesday, August 12, 2009 4:06:15 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [8] 
# Monday, August 10, 2009
Your Monday Creativity Wake-Up Call: That Strange Day

Hey writers,

The July/August issue of Writer’s Digest is nearly off newsstands, and I feel a bit weepy, like an old friend is about to pack up the U-Haul, give some of those awkward parting hugs and hit the road. I love this edition, and I say that not to get everyone out to the store to gobble it up in droves, but because—from Jessica Strawser’s interview with literary guru Anne Tyler to the publishing survival guide package and the blast I had profiling travel writer Rick Steves—it’s one of my favorites from the last two years.

July/August 2009 WD: Gone too soon, off to the great mag universe in the sky. (Or, rather, to the Internet, where it will live on at the Writer’s Digest Shop.) Luckily it’s slick sibling, the September 2009 issue focused on literary agents, hits newsstands in mid-August, with cutting-edge coverboy Cory Doctorow dishing about his innovative (and seriously cool) approaches to publishing.

As some Monday coffee for your creativity (without all the acidic burn), here’s the prompt I wrote for the July/August issue. Onward!

Yours in writing,

Zachary

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PROMPT: That Strange Day
In 500 words or fewer, funny, sad or stirring:

It’s been raining for weeks and a single thought has been stuck in your mind: It plays itself over and over, and you can’t stop pondering what happened on that strange day—the day it started raining.




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Monday, August 10, 2009 4:20:40 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [8] 
# Friday, August 07, 2009
Your Weekend Creativity Challenge: Like a Virgin

Hey writers,

Attached below: Your weekend prompt.

In a short story I’m working on, a character fires a gun. No momentous occasion for the character; not exactly out of the ordinary. Except when he went to shoot it, the report fizzled out—a bang somewhere between a snap-and-pop and a stack of books hitting the ground. The bullet left the chamber and sauntered out into the open, leaving the character itching a bug bite and sending a text message.

Which made me realize: I knew nothing about how to fire a gun. What happens when you fire it. How to fire it. What your hands feel like after you fire it. How the air smells.

Which, simply put, left the fiction lifeless.

So I decided to go out and get educated with a friend at a firing range—which put a lifetime of bb-gun play and video game stereotypes to shame, revealing an armada of new writing fodder—the sheer (mildly scary), restrained power. The roar. The kick. The quasi-embarrassing scratch on my face from one particularly strong kick.

As Steve Almond once wrote in our magazine, “All readers come to fiction as willing accomplices to your lies.” Sometimes, it seems, good writing is all about sharpening our lies.

Here’s to trying something new.

Have an excellent weekend,

Zachary


PROMPT: Like a Virgin
In 500 words or fewer, funny, sad or stirring:

Do something you’ve never done before, and use the experience in scene.  


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Also, if you're a publishing futurist or simply curious about where current trends are heading, check out Digital Book World. I'm intrigued, and the blog debates are pretty stirring.


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Friday, August 07, 2009 4:25:55 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [3] 
# Wednesday, August 05, 2009
Your Mid-Week Prompt: Redefining Love

Hey writers,

How goes it? All is well in Promptland and Digest-ville. We just wrapped our October issue and are plodding onward toward our November/December mag, and the (most-excellent) post-wrap (brief) calm has descended. I’m working on a piece for the next issue involving literary journals and magazines, and I’m curious, since many of you have the short-fiction skills—have any of you written for any lit mags? Which are your favorites?

Also, a tip of the hat to J. Alvey and his authentic, spooky “Here’s to the Lion” story. It takes the cake as this week’s Notable Story pick. Thanks for the great tale and a great spin on the prompt and predators, Joe.

Be well and write well,

Zachary


PROMPT: Redefining Love
In 500 words or fewer, funny, sad or stirring:

In a scene, define love.

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Also, there’s been a lot of talk around the office about the upcoming Writer’s Digest Conference on the business of getting published and selling books. Yesterday the WD event powers that be announced that all attendees can get free critiques of their work, and 10 will be selected to meet with literary agents. (If you’re interested, it’s Sept. 18-20, New York. You can read more here.)


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Wednesday, August 05, 2009 4:15:35 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [8] 
# Monday, August 03, 2009
Your Monday Prompt: Wherever You May Write

Hey writers,

Hope everyone had an excellent weekend. I ended up stumbling upon whereiwrite.org (check it out if you have a second—it’s fascinating), a site that documents notable scribes in their natural habitats. Which made me wonder: Where do you all write?

Here’s to hoping all is well in your world (and at your desk),

Zachary


PROMPT: Wherever You May Write
In 500 words or fewer, funny, sad or stirring:

Write a scene that takes place wherever you write. Take an object [or two] that is always present at your desk, and make it a key element of your scene.



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Monday, August 03, 2009 5:42:26 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [7] 
# Friday, July 31, 2009
Your Weekend Prompt: That Wicked Old Scent

Hey writers,

The battle to finish our October issue wages on, and so I’ll again be brief: Here’s to hoping your writing and muses are treating you well. Mine were MIA for the last few days, but I blame it on a week of ominous, slightly frightening scents in the hallway of my otherwise cozy apartment building (see below).

Have a great Friday-Saturday-Sunday!

Zachary


PROMPT: That Wicked Old Scent
In 500 words or fewer, funny, sad or stirring, write a story inspired by or containing the following:

“It smells like something has died in the walls,” she said.
“Well, do something about it.”
“I always do.”
He remembered what happened last time, and the sun sagged low.



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Friday, July 31, 2009 7:59:39 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [8] 
# Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Your Wednesday Prompt: Here's To the Lion
Hey writers,

On Monday I read through last week’s pool of stories: How you all turn around such content so fast with innovative spins continues to baffle me. Moreover, it’s awesome to see Constant Writers (the Promptly pickpocketing of Stephen King’s Constant Readers terminology) developing—a sense of your voices is percolating to the surface. I’m proud to have you writing here, and I type that without flattery. To you, and our new writers this week, thanks for sticking around after the initial challenge. I’d like to call all of you out, but you know who you are.

As for the Notable Story pick of the week, the title goes to Loveskidlit’s story from “Photogenic Stranger.” Check out her well-written, haunting flash-fiction here. To me, she took an unexpected direction and nailed the prompt, down to the meditative final line.

For today’s story, let’s try the Literary Roadshow approach again (I’ll pull a normal, out-of-context line from a book, and use it as a prompt—is one writer’s line-in-passing another’s creative jackpot?).

Yours in writing,

Zachary


From Ernest Hemingway’s short story "The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber":

PROMPT: Here’s To the Lion
In 500 words or fewer, funny, sad or stirring, write a story inspired by or containing the following:

“Here’s to the lion,” he said. “I can’t ever thank you for what you did.”
Margaret, his wife, looked away from him and back to Wilson.
“Let’s not talk about the lion,” she said.
Wilson looked over at her without smiling and now she smiled at him.


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Also, I run writing exercises in our InkWell section of the magazine, and yesterday stumbled upon Bonnie Neubauer's new WD "Take Ten for Writers" book, which is jampacked with endless prompts and exercises. If your prompt quota is still not filled, check it out or read an excerpt here—it inspires jealousy in even the finest prompt scribes.


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Wednesday, July 29, 2009 2:42:47 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)  #  Comments [7] 


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