Creative Writing Prompts

Creative Writing Prompts
Word of the Day for Monday,
September 13, 2010
 tittle \TIT-l\, noun:
 1. A dot or other small mark in writing or printing, used as a
diacritic, punctuation, etc.
2. A very small part or quantity; a particle, jot, or whit
 There is, perhaps, something in the beginning of it which I ought in
modesty to conceal; but I have so much esteem for this
correspondent, that I will not alter a tittle of what she writes,
though I am thus scrupulous at the price of being ridiculous.
-- Joseph Addison, Sir Richard Steele, The Spectator: no. 81-169;
June 2, 1711-Sept. 13, 1711
Word of the Day for
Wednesday, September 8,
2010
gerrymander \JER-i-man-der\, verb:
The dividing of a state, county, etc., into
election districts so as to give one political
party a majority in many districts while
concentrating the voting strength of the
other party into as few districts as
possible.
To appease aggravated fan bases, the
league will gerrymander the early non-
Day 1
It is the first day of school. You
are nervous. Anxious. Big
changes. Not sure what to
expect. Write about your day.
THE CATCH - You are a desk.
Do not announce your
perspective, just assume the
reader knows.
Day 2
 Use the following
words to write a 300
word (or fewer)
story: paper clips,
principal, lunch box,
swing, girl with a pink
ribbon.
Or, how would your
day proceed if you
found out you would
die tomorrow?
Day 3
Choose one of the following or
create your own prompt.
Even the best writers
rely on obvious
words. Practice
mental flexibility by
writing a paragraph
describing a typical
August afternoon
without using the
words hot, humid,
heat or sun.
Write two paragraphs
contrasting your favorite band
or musician with your least
favorite band or musician.
Day 4
Choose one of the following or create
your own prompt.
 If you knew you were
going to be banished to
an igloo for the rest of
your life, what five items
would you take along?
(Assume you would get
all the food, water,
heaters, and warm
clothes you needed.)
Write a paragraph about
what you’d take and why.
List all the clichés you
can think of. Then
choose one to start a
poem or story.
Day 5
 20 years have passed
and your high school has
invited you to be the
keynote speaker at a
graduation ceremony.
Write a speech in which
you give advice to the
seniors and discuss what
your own life has been
like in the years since
you’ve graduated.
Write what you are
feeling right now
using your sense of
smell. If you feel
frustrated, how does
that smell? Use lots
of vivid adjectives.
Day 6
 What is the adage you hate
the most? Every cloud has a
silver lining; stop and smell
the roses; there are other fish
in the sea; if at first you don’t
succeed, try, try again?
 Write a story in which
someone cheerfully cites an
adage and you let loose with
your real feelings. 
Write a very short
story that ends with
the sentence, As he
approached the top
of the mountain, he
raised his hands in
victory.
Day 7
What is the most
boring day you have
had EVER? Write
about it, but make it
sound FASCINATING.
 Believe it or not, the
word alot does not exist.
It is a made up word that
is never grammatically
correct. Always use the
phrase a lot instead. To
ensure you never, ever
forget this rule, write 4
sentences using a lot.
Write 1 about parrots, 1
about free speech, 1
about bicycles, and 1
about Freud.
Day 8
Write an excuse for
not working today.
 When we’re talking, we
say suppose to, instead
of the correct supposed
to. Suppose to is a
made-up phrase. To
burn this rule into your
brain, write 4 sentences
that use supposed to.
Write 1 sentence about
pit bulls, 1 about
politicians, 1 about
protractors, and 1 about
pears.
Day 9
Showing vs. Telling:
Telling is boring – think
Randy was frightened” or
Sandy was happy.  Try
describing body language
instead: Randy cowered
under his blanket or A
grin lit up Sandy’s face.
Write a story about your
first day of kindergarten
and express the emotions
you felt by describing
your body language.
Choose or create 2
people who dislike
each other. Put them
in a cab together and
show what happens!
Day 10
Showing vs. telling:
Mark Twain said, “Don't
say the old lady
screamed. Bring her
on and let her
scream.” Use
description to SHOW
an old lady screaming
– create the reason
and location yourself.
Topic:
An empty glass.
Day 11 - Setting
Describe the setting
around you right
now.
Day 12 – Setting + senses
When you write
description of
settings, be sure to
consider all 5 senses
to draw your reader
in. (See, hear, smell,
taste, touch)
Let’s go outside
and see how the
outdoors inspires
us to think and feel
and smell like
writers!!
Day 13 – Setting + senses
Let’s try a different
setting today! Pay
attention to the
distinct sights, smells,
sounds and textures.
Do your best to put
that feeling into
words.
To the wood shop!
Day 14 Use this photo to
inspire a setting
description that
includes either
character
thought or
dialogue.
Remember to
use the senses!
Day 15 “The shore fumed at
the waves.” Make
this example of
personification your
story starter.
Write a newspaper
article about a school
play or movie you’ve
seen recently. Be
sure to cover the
FIVE W’s – who,
what, when, where,
and why.
Word of the Day for Friday,
September 3, 2010
 cachinnate \KAK-uh-neyt\, verb:
 To laugh loudly or immoderately.
 His long nose, thick lips and crafty, bulging eyes seemed
tense with the urge to cachinnate.
-- Anton Pavlovich Chekhov, Ronald Hingley, The Steppe
and Other Stories I observe my fellow baskers snap,
cachinnate, straighten out government policy. That's
the wonder of abroad.
-- Tibor Fischer, The Thought Gang Cachinnate evolves
into the English cackle , but derives from the Sanskrit
kakhati, "laughs."
Day 16 - Publishing
 You’ve been
commissioned to lure
tourists to your town by
writing a travel brochure.
Write a few paragraphs
for inclusion in this
brochure, making your
town sound as thrilling
and scenic as you can.
Describe the place
you like to go when
you want to get away
from the stresses of
life.
Word of the Day for Tuesday,
September 7, 2010
kenspeckle \KEN-spek-uhl\, adjective:
Conspicuous; easily seen or recognized.
He feared that he was too kenspeckle to
escape.
-- Samuel Rutherford Crockett, The Stickit
Minister: And Some Common Men Rose took her
seat, proud of herself for not succumbing to her
kenspeckle habit of stretching the truth far
beyond its borders.
-- Liz Curtis Higgs, Fair Is the Rose
Day 17 – Peer Evaluation
Who is one of your
favorite authors and
what keeps you
reading his/her
books?
Writing is like…
(Think of something
you do – party
planning cooking,
making the perfect
dessert – and
compare it to the
process of
writing…metaphors
be with you!)
Word of the Day for Wednesday,
September 8, 2010
rubric \ROO-brik\, noun:
1. A title, heading, or the like, written or
printed in red or otherwise distinguished
from the rest of the text.
2. A direction for the conduct of divine
service.
3. Any established mode of conduct or
procedure.
Word of the Day for Wednesday,
September 8, 2010
 Gerrymander
 The dividing of a state, county, etc., into election districts so as to
give one political party a majority in many districts while
concentrating the voting strength of the other party into as few
districts as possible.
 To appease aggravated fan bases, the league will gerrymander
the early non-divisional, non-crossover scheduling to allow
Wisconsin to play both Nebraska and Iowa in 2011 and 2012.
-- Scott Dochterman, "Final guesses on Big Ten divisional
realignment," Doc's Office blog, gazetteonline.com, September
2010. They could not, though, tire of the unilateral focus upon
feathering the rich's pockets and gerrymander the system.
-- Carlene Hatcher Polite, Pierre Alien, The Flagellants
Day 18
 Choose an imaginary
figure from your
childhood – Santa Claus,
the Tooth Fairy, the
Sandman – and give him
or her a darker, more
realistic side. Is the
Sandman an insomniac?
The Tooth Fairy a
kleptomaniac?
Write a paragraph on
the topic of “The
Worst Pet
Imaginable.” Be sure
your paragraph
includes a topic
sentence and four
supporting sentences.
Day 19 – Character Development
One way to develop a
character is through
his/her actions.
SHOW a character
who is selfish and
overly confident using
ONLY actions.
Have you ever gotten
caught doing
something wrong?
How did you react?
How did you feel? Do
you think your
feelings showed?
Write about this (or
some fictional event)
paying close attention
to actions.
Word of the Day for Tuesday,
September 14, 2010
ambrosial \am-BROH-zhuhl\, adjective:
1. Exceptionally pleasing to taste or smell;
especially delicious or fragrant.
2. Worthy of the gods; divine.
But if something is slightly bruised,
speckled or dinged on the outside, we
don't usually take the time to wonder if it
might be ambrosial within.
Word of the Day for Monday,
September 20, 2010
 imago \ih-MAH-goh\, noun:
 1. An idealized concept of a loved one, formed in childhood and
retained unaltered in adult life.
2. Entomology. An adult insect.
 She pictured him retaining, year after year, her imago in his heart,
as strongly as his was impressed upon her own at that moment.
-- Ellen Wallace, King's Cope: a novel The woman herself may
change, but his imago of her once formed and given its lasting
outlines in the heat of passion, does not change, so that he may
himself even be faithful to a wife who is unfaithful.
-- Wilfrid Lay, Man's Unconscious Passion and Man's Unconscious
Spirit
Day 26
Retell one of your
favorite fairy tales
from childhood. Set
it in the present day.
Rewrite the ending of
Cinderella so that the
shoe fits one of the
stepsisters. How
does Prince Charming
react? How does
Cinderella cope?
Don’t forget about
Fairy Godmother!
Day 28
The best dialogue
mimics how people
actually talk. Write a
dialogue between two
of your friends, trying
to capture their real
speech patterns.
Suppose you’ve been
commissioned to
write a description of
the world as you
know it using only ten
sentences. This will
be placed in a time
capsule that will be
opened 500 years
from today.
Word of the Day for Wednesday,
September 22, 2010
agog \uh-GOG\, adjective:
Full of excitement or interest; in eager
desire; eager, keen.
Kobe Bryant left the Minnesota
Timberwolves agog after a series of eyepopping moves in a game last week.
-- New York Times, February 5, 1998
Word of the Day for Tuesday,
September 21, 2010
Brobdingnagian \brob-ding-NAG-ee-uhn\,
adjective:
Of extraordinary size; gigantic; enormous.
The venture capital business has a size problem.
A monstrous, staggering, stupefying one.
Brobdingnagian even.
-- Russ Mitchell, "Too Much Ventured Nothing
Gained", Fortune, November 11, 2002
Day 30
Where would you MOST like to be a fly on the
wall? Where would you most NOT want to
be? Write a story from the perspective of you
as a literal fly, observing things around you with
people you know, when they don’t know you
are there.
Word of the Day for Monday,
September 27, 2010
 Today's word was submitted by Nasim M.
Submit yours by going Back to School with
Dictionary.com!
rigmorole \RIG-muh-rohl\, noun:
1. An elaborate or complicated procedure.
2. Confused, incoherent, foolish, or meaningless
talk.
"My dear young lady," I groaned, "you don't
want to be stripped of every dollar for such a
"rigmarole!"
-- Henry James, Four Meetings
Day 31
Use this line
anywhere in your
story:
“Behind her, the
noise escalated.”
Develop a list of 10
reasons you would
quit bathing for a
week.
Day 32
Write a story about a
fad that gets out of
control.
“To be great is to be
misunderstood.”
Ralph Waldo Emerson
Day 33
Social rules – what
What is the best
are they good for?
surprise you have
Where do they come
ever had or would
from? Write a scene
like to have?
in which one
character breaks a (or
many) social rules
and others react.
Word of the Day for Thursday,
September 30, 2010
lucifugous \loo-see-FOO-guhs\, adjective:
Avoiding light.
There begin to be seen walking the
streets, hugging the walls, odd
lucifugous creatures such as the tide
uncovers when the water withdraws.
Day 34
Write a paragraph
about anything you
would do over if you
could.
 Create a character who has a
secret to confess, but who is
afraid to confess it. Write the
diary or journal entries that
your character would write as
she or he considers the secret,
explores why it needs to be
confessed, thinks about who
will be affected if the secret is
known, and considers why she
or he is afraid.
Day 35
Create a dialogue
between the two
ditziest people you
can imagine, such as
Bambi and Biff. Each
character should
speak at least ten
times.
If you were choosing
the menu for your
last meal, what would
it include? Write
detailed descriptions
of each item on the
menu.
Day 36
Consider someone or
something that
makes you happy.
Choose one very
precise detail to
focus on and write a
poem on it.
Write a 3 paragraph
story that could end
with this sentence:
So the moral is, be
careful what you wish
for.
Day 37
 Has any issue concerning
your town or state been
bothering you lately?
Write a letter to the
editor of your local
newspaper expressing
your opinion on this
issues. Try to be
persuasive but not
emotional.
 An extremely LONG
sentence is not
necessarily a run on.
Write the longest
sentence you can without
creating a run-on. Try to
create a 50 word
sentence!
Day 41
What if license plates
had phone numbers?
Write a story about
something that might
happen if you had the
cell phone number of
people on the road.
Story Starter:
It was all good until
the movie ended. .. .
Poetry!
I Can’t Write a Poem” Poem (all grade levels)
Make a list of your favorite excuses or
complaints about writing poetry.
“I Can’t Write a Poem” makes a great title.
Add an ending such as: Time’s up? Uh oh!
All I have is this dumb list of excuses.
You like it? Really? No kidding.
Thanks a lot. Would you like to see another
one?
Welcome to the Future!
Good poetry uses images to help convey
a message. Watch the following link of
Brad Paisley’s “Welcome to the future”
and use the images as inspiration for
your own poem.
 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y0Yg9wjctRw&ob=av3e
Poetry - connotation
Reckless
Last night I was
reckless –
Didn’t brush my teeth
And went to bed tasting
my dinner all night.
And it tasted good.
Consider what this
poem means. In
what ways was the
author reckless? The
sarcasm is meant to
be humorous. There
is a play on words:
what tasted good –
the dinner or the
recklessness?
Poetic exercise
caring
Loving
smiling
busy
teaching
Mother
talking
helping
curly
hair
cooking
glasses
lawyer
floral
dress
Make your own idea
maps for the following
words. 60 seconds per
map.
Father
Home
Police
School
Sport
Write a poem from one
set of words. 
Poetry - connotation
 First Frost
A girl is freezing in a telephone booth,
Huddled in her flimsy coat,
Her face strained by tears
And smeared with lipstick.
She breathes on her thin little fingers.
Fingers like ice. Glass beads in her ears.
She has to beat her way back alone
Down the icy street.
First frost. A beginning of losses.
The first frost of telephone phrases.
It is the start of winter glittering on her
cheek,
The first frost of having been hurt.
First Ice
A girl freezes in a telephone booth.
In her draughty overcoat she hides
A face all smeared
In lipstick and tears.
She breathes on her thin palms.
Her fingers are icicles. She wears
ear-rings.
She’ll have to walk home alone,
Along the ice-bound street.
First ice. The very first time.
The first ice of telephone phrases.
Frozen tears glisten on her cheeks –
The first ice of human hurt.
Writing contest “capture”
prompts
Create a “snapshot” with your words that
describes someone who is captured by their
image, how others see them. You can write in
poetry or prose.
Metaphors for “Capture”
Positive





Picture
Film
Capture a heart
Passion
Embrace
Negative





Jail/prison
Trap/snare
Cell
Cage
Handcuffs
“Capture”
YOU have been
captured –
What do you see?
Feel?
Hear?
Poetry – Metaphors
Write a poem where
you use a metaphor
for being captured.
Perspective changes
all stories. Tell a
story about a conflict
you had from the
point of view of the
OTHER person.
Epic poetry
 Throughout the ages, storytellers and writers have regaled
audiences with tales of men in extraordinary situations
overcoming seemingly insurmountable odds. In the
greatest of these tales the men come to be known as
heroes and the work itself comes to be known as an epic
poem. But what is it exactly that makes a story an epic?
Part of a long tradition, including both oral and written
tales, there are a variety of recurring features many epic
poems share. Though no one work necessarily contains all
the following elements, they are nonetheless common
denominators found throughout the genre.
Epic Poetry
 Writing and Narration
 Known as “in medias res” (meaning “in the middle of things”), the
narration of an epic typically begins after the action has already begun
or the hero has set out on his journey. It’s the literary equivalent of
arriving late to the party and having to be brought up to speed with the
drama still unfolding. One commonly recognized example of this could
be found in Homer’s Iliad, which begins with the Trojan War already
underway.
 Another aspect of the epic is its tendency to take its characters all
around the world, with action unfolding across multiple countries and
even continents. Homer’s Odyssey, for example, follows Odysseus after
the Trojan War. This journey of ten years takes our hero to numerous
locations throughout ancient Greece in his attempt to return home to
Ithaca. Ovid’s Metamorphoses, for its part, takes place up and down the
entire known ancient world.
Epic Poetry
Upon Awakening,
I Hurl the Covers to
the Floor….
Mock-heroic works
are comical because
they describe
something mundane
in grand, inflated
language. Write a
mock-heroic account
of your usual morning
routine by describing
it in melodramatic,
grandiose language.
What is poetry??
List the traits you
think makes
something poetic –
how much has to do
with word choice?
How much is the
topic? How much is
the FORM or way it
looks on the page?
Pattern
Rhyme scheme
Rhythm
Word choice
Depth of topic
Paints a picture
Length??
Audience is clear
Random Journal
Write a script for a
If you were a cat,
twix commercial (you
what would your day
know, the ones where
be like? Tell what
you need more time
you do, see, smell,
to think?).
feel, and hear.
Use script format and
stage directions.
Journal
 Choose something you’re
wearing right now and
pretend you’re about to
put it up for auction on
eBay. Write a few
paragraphs singing its
praises. Be careful about
spelling and grammar –
studies have shown that
correctly spelled ads
receive much higher bids
on eBay than badly
spelled ones.
 Rewrite the following
sentences to vary
sentence structure:
 Teddy glanced at his
watch. He couldn’t
believe it. It was already
two o’clock. He was late
fro his job interview. He
wondered why he was so
irresponsible. He realized
he might cry.
Journal
Slice of Life poem
Read the poem
and respond as
instructed.
Begin planning your
children’s story. It is
due Wednesday of
next week!
Journal
What was your
favorite book as a
child? What made it
so good? List specific
qualities that you
remember.
Journal
The MOOD of a story or passage is the
general feeling it conveys. A story’s
mood might be tense in one passage
and light in another. Use the sentence
below as the first line of a story, and
then create six different second
sentences, each of which creates a
different mood.
“Pierre sat quietly and
stared out the window.”
Journal
The “AND” Challenge:
Write a threeparagraph story that
doesn’t use the word
“and.”
If you had to spend
two weeks alone on a
remote island and
could choose only
one kind of food and
one kind of drink to
take along, what
would you choose?
Explain your
rationale.
Journal
The antagonist of a story is
the person who acts against
the protagonist, the story’s
principal character. In the
story of your life, who is your
antagonist? Write a
description of this person,
and describe the way in
which he or she acts against
you.
Journal
What’s in a name? Actually, quite a lot.
Especially in works of fiction, names reflect
social class and personality. Can you imagine a
femme fatale named Sally or a kindly plumber
named Basil?
Create three characters that could appear in a
novel – but do not name them yet. Write a
paragraph about each character, and then
choose the perfect name for each.
Journal
List the first ten nouns you
think of when you hear the
word circus. Use those ten
words in a paragraph
explaining what a circus is.
Imagine that your reader is
someone who has never
seen a circus before.
Journal
Alien discovery. An
alien visits our planet.
Write about what is
most confusing to the
alien about the way
we live our lives.
Mistakes. Have you
or someone you know
ever made a terrible
mistake? Write a
story or poem about
it. Can all mistakes be
forgiven? No names
please.
Journal
Heard in the halls
Closet. You open
… Take a snippet of
your closet door:
conversation you hear
What do you see?
in the hallway or at
the mall or in some
public place. Create a
story that finishes the
sentence or the
conversation. Make it
up.