Often when on a school visit I’ll talk to the
children about where they get their ideas and inspirations from for their stories; and I'll tell them where the inspiration has come from
for my books.
Their suggestions usually include getting ideas
from watching television, or from books and newspapers, or from
places they visit and so on. Generally someone will come up with the
suggestion of getting ideas from dreams – and if they don’t -
I’ll remind them that dreams – and nightmares are often a great
source of inspiration.
Usually at the mention of nightmares they shy away
and pull faces, until I tell them about the nightmare I had. It was a
few years ago now, but that doesn’t matter, I tell them of how I’d
dreamed of a horribly monstrous grave digger – and I'll do a swift
impression so they get the picture! I tell them how I woke up in a
cold sweat but instead of letting the bad dream worry or frighten me,
I made good use of it - I scribbled it down on a scrap of paper by
my bed.
A few weeks later I spotted a writing competition
for a short horror story. I looked back over my notes written in the
dark in the dead of night, and wrote them up as a scary story which
went on to take first prize – and £200.
Every pair of eyes in the classroom always light
up at this and I can almost imagine them begging their parents to let
them have a nice chunk of cheese at supper-time in the hope they’ll
have a nightmare!
It's all good fun yet true. I don’t know about
other writers, but most of my stories and books – or scenes in
books or characters have been sparked by something specific and it’s
usually the oddest little thing.
A stained glass window inches deep in cobwebs that
I’d spotted on holiday in North Devon found its way into Disaster
Bay; the nursery rhyme Oranges and Lemons provided one of
my favourite scenes in Cry Danger; an abandoned canal boat
formed the basis for Fishing for Clues and a skull I spotted
in a little Scottish museum was the trigger for my Beast
trilogy.
A prehistoric skull inspired my Beast books. |
But probably the oddest object that sparked the
idea for a little horror story I called Bad Dreams came from a
drinks can. I was driving at night with my grandson, Jake. He'd
finished his can of pop, crushed the can slightly then placed it on
the dashboard. As I was driving, certain street lights brought its
reflection up in my line of vision. The dents he’d made somehow
transformed the image I was seeing from a tin can to a face - a
macabre bodiless face that was white and haunting... A storyline was
already forming in my head by the time we’d got home.
We get our ideas and inspirations from all over
the place. But what, I wonder - has been the oddest
object/place/thing that has inspired you so far?
Ann Evans
www.annevansbooks.co.uk
9 comments:
I love this post! So many writers won't answer the question 'Where do you get your ideas from?' but it's still the most fascinating question to explore. I suppose it's down to having a special way of looking at the world - 'writer goggles'. Thousands of people might have seen a weird reflection in a car window, but very few would ever think to take it further.
And you always seem such a kind, lovely an dgentle person, Ann! Great post about how such moments of re-seeing spark an idea.
Hi there! I really enjoyed this post. I am so fascinated by dreams and their meanings. I too had a nightmare that shook me so much that it ended up as a short story. But I've never been brave enough to send it in, its too horrible! Thanks again- keep dreaming! :-)
Thank you for the comments and kind words. Isn't it right though, whenever we give talks we tell the kids/adults to keep an ideas notebook, thing is, we don't always follow our own good advice.
Lovely post Ann. I get my ideas from all sorts of things but living in Cornwall inspired several books of mine, including Dolphin Rescue and setting for the Amy Carter Mysteries.
Hi there! I had to get back in touch just to let you know your post has inspired my most recent post. I've put a link on my blog back to yours so any readers passing through can take a look too. I hope this is o.k. Thanks again.
My daughter fell out of a tree recently (she was - mostly - fine!) and as she was being wheeled into the ambulance, on a board with her head held in place with those soft blocks, I was saying to her in that calm, Reassuring Parent manner, 'You have to remember all this - think how useful it will be when you want to write a story ...' I did wonder at the time what the ambulance crew thought!
Hah, great musings. But you do get stymied when people ask. I generally go the flippant route and reply with, "Weeelll, there's this little little shop of ideas I go to at the bottom of a dark alley in the old part of town." One journalist actually asked for the address. But hang on, what if she followed it up and found the address...okay there's a story there somewhere. So there's another source, replying to blogs about where you get your ideas from.
Now my head hurts.
Course that's okay Shez! And I hope anonymous's daughter has recovered. Thanks for the comments everyone.
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