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Showing posts with label ideas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ideas. Show all posts

Saturday, 15 May 2010

Helping the flow of ideas


Another piece of writing inspiration from one of my husband’s Kununurra photos.

It’s a lovely photo, isn’t it? Peaceful and calm. But if you start to look at it, there’s so much going on. First, there’s the water flowing down over the rocks. It’s not just pouring down, it’s quietly digging its way into the rocks below, forming the deep pool. All around, the trees and plants are growing and, if I know the Aussie bush, it’s alive with birds and insects, all going about their business and adding their own sounds to the gentle rush of the waterfall.

So how does it relate to writing? The waterfall, I see as a flow of ideas. They come into your mind and fill it, gradually spilling out into stories, poems and novels which can be enjoyed by everyone. The stronger the flow of ideas, the deeper the well of ideas becomes. We can’t use them all at once of course, so they work their way deeper until they can get out.

Now of course, that flow of water in the waterfall will sometimes dry up. In Kununurra, the summer is wet, so the waterfall was flowing quite strongly when P took the photo. In winter it will probably dry up to a trickle or maybe to nothing at all. Our waterfall of ideas, too, needs a source. So where do we get the ideas to keep it flowing?

Number one, for me anyway, is reading the work of others. Often I fall in love with a character and use them as the basis for my own story. Not the whole character of course. That would be little more than fan fiction. I may use the way they behave, the way they look, their relationship with other characters. Snippets of ideas put together from different books and stirred thoroughly. All those things go into the stream and wash down over the rocks into my pool of ideas.

Then there’s films, magazines and TV. I have to admit that my characters are often based on actors or people with ‘interesting faces’ that I see in the media. Not famous faces. If I had Harrison Ford walking around my novel, it might be a little obvious. But some lesser known actors have wonderful faces, full of character and I tend to start a story with a character rather than a plot. I make up a person and then do the ‘what ifs’ to get a plot and enhance the character. Using people’s faces this way is helpful to me, because when I start to lose touch with them in my story, I can go back and look at pictures or movies and get them more firmly planted in my brain.

Newspapers are another great source of plots. A simple headline can stick in the mind and start the flow of ideas. Put a strange headline with a face you like and see what ideas start to flow.

Then, of course, there is every day life. I live and work with interesting people. People tell stories all the time and sometimes a gem of an idea might fall into the stream. By the time it has rubbed its way over the waterfall it will be unrecognisable as their story and become a story of its own.

Sometimes, for me, the problem is not how to keep the ideas flowing, but how to keep them all from flowing over the edges of the waterhole before I’ve had chance to use them.

How about you? How do you keep your waterfall from drying up?

Friday, 19 February 2010

Settling on an idea

I’m in the post-novel blues at the moment. It’s not that I can’t think of anything to write. On the contrary, I’ve got three or four stories swimming around in my head, like hyperactive salmon. Occasionally, one will bob to the surface and take a breath of air. Then I start writing. But just as quickly, it sinks and I stop. Or, while I'm writing one, another splashes to the surface and demands attention, distracting me. So I’m making very little progress with anything really.

Do you have limits to how many stories you might have ‘on the go’ at once? I’ve worked on two at once quite happily, but I don’t know if I could adequately handle any more than that. Two allowed me to carry on with one as soon as enthusiasm waned on the other, but I think I’d probably lose the threads on any more than that.

So I could carry on and make myself deal with two of my ideas. But which two? I can’t decide! It’s too hard.

Thursday, 11 June 2009

Coincidence?

One set of books I’ve not read (and haven’t made plans to read, I'm afraid) is Philip Pullman’s “His Dark Materials”. However, I have seen and read enough about the books for this extract from Victor Hugo’s ‘Les Miserables’ to make me wonder if this is where he got the idea for ‘daemons’ from?

“It is our conviction that if souls were visible to the eye we should distinctly see this strange fact that each individual of the human species corresponds to some one of the species of the animal creation; and we should clearly recognise the truth, hardly perceived by thinkers, that, from the oyster to the eagle, from the swine to the tiger, all animals are in man and that each of them is in a man; sometimes even several of them at a time.
Animals are nothing but the forms of our virtues and vices wandering before our eyes, the visible phantoms of our souls.”

Victor Hugo, Les Miserables (1862)


Wikipedia says that he got the idea from Leonardo da Vinci's "Lady with an Ermine" (1489–90), as well as from two portraits by Giovanni Battista Tiepolo and Hans Holbein the Younger. But I’m wondering now – did Hugo inspire it as well? What do you think? Coincidence? They do say there’s no such thing as a new idea.