Here's
an odd-but-effective method of developing a creative writing piece.
Next time you're at your writer's group, warm up with this exercise:
Give each member two slips of paper. On the first, we write an
adjective. On the other, we write a noun. These are folded up and
placed into two respective piles.
Each
pile is shuffled separately and each member picks out one nounslip
and one verb slip. The title and subject for each person's vignette
is “The (adjective) (noun)”.
With 10
minutes on the clock, I produced this story. You might be surprised
by where it leads. (Geddit? “Leads”? Oh well.)
The
Round Dog
Bert's
dog wasn't like other dogs. Sure, he could take Dougal for walks, and
yeah, he'd bark once in a while, but Dougal was a difficult dog to
look after. Difficult to stroke, difficult to explain and very hard
to get over stiles on country walks. Dougal was round. I don't mean
rotund, like Bert had been feeding him too much- I mean round. He was
a circular dog. A tubular canine. A growth defect after being born in
an empty tank on the back of a diesel transporter.
When
Bert took Dougal for walks, he clipped the lead to the collar, a
leather strap fitperfectly to the circumference of the dog. Bert
would go for a stroll, Dougal for a roll. As they walked, the lead
would whip up and down like a lasoo.
Across
from Dougal, on a bright day, a border collie was chasing a frisbee,
leaping to catch it in his mouth.
Dougal
tugged at the lead and Bert untied him to let him roam.
Dougal,
confused by the collie's behaviour, rotated towards the dog and bit
the dog on the ankle. The dog went full-circle and bit the 360-degree
dog in return.
Hmm.
Yes. The last sentence was written after the alarm had sounded, hence
the clunkiness. Rebel!
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