It’s all very well deciding to write a book, but what some people call ‘a lack of ideas’ is a big stumbling block – you simply don’t feel like you have enough of them to keep you going. I dispute this, because there are literally ideas all around us wherever we go and next week I’m going to post a series of exercises that will help you to generate ideas. But first an introduction: even the most mundane object has a story to tell. Try the following and you’ll see what I mean.
Pick up any object close to where you are now. Now ask yourself the following and make up the answers if you don’t know:
It’s not exactly lack of ideas that’s the problem, but how to funnel all the possible ideas ‘out there’ or in you head and apply them in a coherent way to the book you want to write.
For now, we’ll break that down by looking at two seemingly simply questions:
Two different but related questions! I’ll give you an obvious example to illustrate my point:
It’s pretty obvious straight away that the one doesn’t fit the other. Now you could, if you wanted to, write a poetry collection about productivity for small business owners. There’s nothing stopping you. But I’m guessing that poetry probably isn’t the most appropriate way to communicate about the topic.
It actually doesn’t matter which of these questions you start with, but you’d be amazed how many times I’ve spoken to writing students who – when I start to drill down into it – know the answer to one but not the other. This only matters if it stops you from writing, because if you write for long enough, you’ll eventually provide yourself with the answers, but as we’re on the subject, why not stop for a moment and see if you can answer both? Ask yourself: What do you want to write? What do you want to write about?
Now you’ve got the answers to those down, use these questions to think them through:
I’ve made up some examples to show you how getting specific helps you to identify an opportunity and an idea. For instance:
Could become:
Getting more specific like this not only helps with idea generation, it also helps in three other important ways:
This time, I’ll apply the questions to a different kind of writing.
Could become:
This time, getting more specific would have helped you to:
One poetry competition entry isn’t a whole book but the questions – as thinking tools – would have given you enough space to come up with a theme for a pamphlet or collection and one place where you can go and read other poets who are writing about nature. In other words, this idea could one day become a whole book, and that’s all you’re after at this stage.
The answers could easily have been different. Here are other ways in which they could have evolved:
Or:
By the way, I’ve created a course for beginners on writing poetry – you can sign up here.
In this example, the questions help my imaginary writer friend to come up with the genre they’re most interested in:
Could become:
Next steps might be to work on outlining the novel, to read more fantasy fiction or to work on some character sketches.
So as a thinking exercise, ask yourself (write it down!) what do I want to write and what do I want to write about? Then drill down into the answers. You might surprise yourself.
Next week I’ll be posting a series of exercises on how to come up with ideas for a book. Until then, happy writing,
Lou xx