Looming
What is this?
What’s going to happen?
Where is it?
Why are you here?
Go from there.
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What is this?
What’s going to happen?
Where is it?
Why are you here?
Go from there.
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.
.
Assume there is real magic behind superstitions. Pick a superstition and tell why it works. Here’s a selection if you need one. (There were too many to choose from! ;-)

Here’s a link to Patricia Wrede’s Worldbuilder questions to ask when creating a fantasy world.
It looks like an awesome set of questions to ask yourself as you’re creating a world, some you’d never think to think about. The questions are categorized. (I’ve listed the categories below.) Here’s a sampling, one question from each category:
The categories:
Use the following words as a writing prompt … in the order given! A bit more of a challenge but easier to keep track of which words you’ve used. ;-) (Expect to not get through all of them.)
stuffed
glass blower
temporary
solemnly
myriad
galumph
peer
slinging
transforming
skillet
firemaker
buzz bomb
exuberance
virtue
seashell
indolent
dispel
grace
irascible
cunning
travel
demolish
devil
begin
stolid
Describe an event from 3 different points of view. You can use one of the following ideas if you wish. Feel free to play around with them.
If you need some inspiration on creating mysterious places, Mysterious Britain has a nice collection.
The main collection is at Featured Sites. There are photos, history, legends, enigmas for the sites listed. Some have a “Photo Gallery” link next to the name for more pictures.
If you go to the Home page there are links to more though shorter articles about other sites.
Here’s a bit from “The Aldworth Giants“.
The tiny atmospheric parish church at Aldworth, contains numerous huge effigies of the De La Beche family. The figures are supposed to be life size representations, depicting knights all over seven feet tall.According to tradition the giants were known by other names: John Long, John Strong, John Never Afraid and John Ever Afraid. The effigy said to represent John Ever afraid no longer exists, but was set in an alcove in the outside wall of the church, which has now been blocked. It is said that he sold his soul to the Devil in exchange for worldly riches. The bargain was that the Devil would claim his soul whether he was buried inside or outside the church. Burying his body within the church walls meant that the Devil was cheated of his prize.
Write a surreal “shopping list.”
Have on your list one of the first thing, two of he second thing, three of the third … If you want, have a theme running through it.
Let your imagination flow and list however many things 10-15 minutes will let you.
Here’s an example if you need a jump start. The prompt and example were created by cuddledumplin at Elite Skills.
Pick one of the following as a 10-15 minute writing prompt. Try to get all 4 words into your story.
A writer and artist (William Burroughs and Brion Gysin) did some experimenting with cutting up text and others with cutting up pictures to juxtapose them to find meaning in things that had never been put together before. They would take random pages, divide them into squares (2x2), cut up the squares and then put random squares next to each other, lining up the text, to make new pages.
There’s an implementation of this idea at Understanding VORN.
I’m fascinated by it. It hasn’t inspired me yet but I think it’s really cool. :-)
What they’ve done is pull random pictures whose tags start with the letters V,O,R,N. (For vorn magazine, a German based art magazine. Vorn means “ahead”, “in front”, “to the fore”.) Then it displays them as a block.
Here’s their explanation:
Every five minutes it scours thousands of weblogs [Flikr and LiveJournal it says lower on the page], searching for the four most recently posted pictures that begin with the letters ‘V’, ‘O’, ‘R’, ‘N’. Every five minutes, UNDERSTANDING VORN changes, filled with fresh words and pictures from the blogosphere.
Set a timer for 10-15 minutes.
You’re a weary demon reporter for the Hellbent Ledger in Hell. Interview a new angel in Heaven.
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As the days get longer, it seems that available time shrinks ;-) So I’ll be slowing down a bit over the summer and just send out one prompt on Tuesdays and Thursdays instead of two.
Set a timer for 10-15 minutes.
You’re a brand new angel reporter for the Angel Sun Times who just barely got into Heaven. Interview a demon in hell.
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This is from David Parlett’s Suspensions.
One player takes a short sentence from a novel, less than 10 words, and writes it down. To the rest of the players he announces the initial letters of each word. Each player then writes down a sentence with words that begin with those letters. The players pass those back to the person with the real sentence who then alphabetizes them by first word and then reads them. Players try to guess which is the original sentence.
Tip: If short sentences are hard to find, cut out some of the phrases.
If you want to keep score, give a point to each person whose sentence gets picked as the real one.
Make a list of words that have the same consonants *sounds* as your first name. (Or name of a pet, your last name …)
Joyce is a good example since the “j” sound can also come from a “g” and the “ce” sound can come from an “s”.
Rhymezone can help. There’s pull down menu there that says “Match consonants only”. Which actually matches consonant sounds not just consonants.
Use 10 of those words in a story, paragraph or sentence.
This is in the same vein of the “By the sound of things” prompt: Paying attention to words that resonate together because of similar internal sounds.
From The City Newsstand’s (a newsstand/bookstore in Chicago) monthly MAGBAG — Top 10 Tabloid Headlines. (Mostly from Weekly World News (WWN) and the SUN.)
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