Vampires, Fairies and Dragons, Oh My!: Inviting the Whimsical into Your Story
Hello there Cherie fans!
My name is Alana
Garrigues, and I'd like to thank Cherie for hosting my co-editor,
Nutschell Anne Windsor, and me during our whirlwind January Story
Sprouts CBW-LA Writing Day Exercises and Anthology blog tour! (More on
that later.) We're so happy to be here.
If you're a regular reader of Cherie's blog, I'm
going to first assume that you are here to bask in her awesome
personality whenever you can - good choice! - and then I'm going to
assume you are into special magical mysterious things.
Things like vampires and mermaids, dragons and
fairies, speaking flora and fauna, magical potions, witches and wizards,
unexplainable beings and unnatural coincidences. Things our left brains
tell us don't exist, but our right brains scream of possibility and
wonder.
I'm going to assume this because you love to read
the works of a very talented speculative fiction author, and because I
believe there is still a leprechaun-chasing, tooth fairy-dreaming,
Rudolph-spotting child hiding in all of us, looking for the magic.
As we age, some of us cling to the memories of
childhood magical beings that are benevolent and kind and grant wishes,
while others delve a little into our fears and the dark side, curious
about monsters and night dwellers and black magic. And as much as some
may argue that make-believe and imagination is for kids, we know that is
not so. Magical, imaginary characters and their powers for good and
evil stand up as allegories of what it really means to be human, with
all of our hopes and anxiety. They also entertain the heck out of us.
Now, a quick time-out to tell you about Story Sprouts ... and how it relates to this post.
Within the anthology, there are aliens invading earth's candy shops, a boy hidden in a robot suit, a character with a vivid flashback of her warrior life centuries before, a hidden room in a seemingly parallel world, vampire shopkeepers, magical wishes, a fairy that protects children from bad decisions, an oozing sandpit taking monstrous shape, a counseling Greek god, and a magical flying pinwheel.
They are all placed in our human world, living among us mere mortals, exposing our weaknesses. Greed, haste, confusion, moral dilemmas, feelings of inadequacy. I believe that is precisely the purpose of introducing make-believe characters in our stories. By inviting the whimsy into our human stories, we are tapping into our childhood yearning for magic while uncovering character traits that may otherwise go unseen. At the same time, in creating a world where human meets imaginary, we are creating an instant tension that draws a reader into the story.
Not all of our writers used whimsical characters. Several of the stories contain all humans, thrown into situations out of their control, and those stories are very strong too. But so many of our writers drifted into the land of vampires and fairies because we gave them permission to play with the concept during that six-hour writing workshop. We provided a character box filled with mad scientists and tricksters, dark wizards and zombies, werewolves and aliens, vampires and fairies, as well as more traditional character types, and encouraged our readers to pick characters at random, allowing them to puzzle and play with magic.
More about Story Sprouts: Released in October, it is the first in a series of Writing Day Workshop Anthologies, which we plan to publish annually. As a bonus, now through January, we're donating 50% of the proceeds from all sales of the book (Kindle and Paperback on Amazon) to Philippine Relief Efforts! So, you can support fellow writers, get 10 great writing exercises and donate to charity for as little as $4.99 - great deal!
33 comments:
Really good fantasy deals with the issues we deal with in our own life and world, but in a way we can handle them better. And imagination is good for any age. Nothing would ever be invented if someone didn't imagine it first.
The ability to weave in the whimsical is one of the things I love most about writing!
I believe that there's always room for something whimsical in any story :) Sounds like a really cool book!!
Story Sprouts sounds like such a helpful resource. And the world be pretty boring I think if we never played in the world of fantasy. =)
Alex, I agree! Imagination is good for any age. It's how awesome advances in technology, medicine and everything else are made!
Nutschell
www.thewritingnut.com
Nicole, it's one of the things I love about writing fantasy!
Nutschell
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Samantha, I agree! Thanks I hope you find Story Sprouts helpful in your own writing. :)
Nutschell
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Emilyann, thanks! And I agree. the world would be boring without fantasy and imagination
Nutschell
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Cherie, thanks again for hosting us on our tour! You rock!
Nutschell
www.thewritingnut.com
Absolutely! A solid mix of relatability and imagination are key to draw a reader in! And re. the inventions - it's fascinating how strong the relationship between literature and television and science is. There was a story on NPR not too long ago about the inventors who grew up reading or watching sci fi and figured out ways to implement the dreams of the writers. So interesting!
So fun!
Ditto!!!
I'm definitely a fan of all things whimsical, so Story Sprouts sounds very cool to me!
So agree with what Alex said. And yes, I think there is a part of us who love fantasy who wish all these magical creatures and magic were a part of our world. Good luck with Story Sprouts.
Story Sprouts sounds like a wonderful collection of exercises. I love the title! Fantasy creatures are so much fun to think about. :)
~Jess
The exercises sound interesting. Sounds like a cool book!
I never fully went into that area of speculative fiction. I would love to explore it, though.
I have my copy. :)
Making up creatures and magical elements is a joyful process. Good for the soul. And Story Sprouts sounds great.
Great post from Alana, Cherie. Thanks for having her. I could feel the magic!
Thanks Heather! There's a little something for everyone in this book, thanks to a gaggle of talented, multi-faceted writers!
Thanks for the comment Natalie! Yes, wouldn't it be fun if the magical creatures were a part of our world? (Hmm, perhaps they are....) ;)
Thanks Jess! Fantasy creatures are so fun! Maybe because there are truly no limits to what they can become.
Thanks Cathy!
Hooray! One of the things I like the most about writing exercises is that we get to play with a ton of different genres without the same level of commitment that a piece we hope to one day publish requires. It's fun to take risks and play with different styles! (I'm a non-fiction writer through and through, but I still try to dabble in a little bit of everything - it helps look at writing with a new lens!)
Absolutely! Good for the soul - I like that. :) I've seen illustrators and artists use similar techniques with the imaginary - I think all creatives, whether they be writers, artists, scientists or inventors, can use a little time with make believe!
Aw, thanks so much Morgan!
Wonderful post. I do love a good does of whimsy in a story! :)
A fairy that protects children from bad decisions? How wonderful.
Interesting post, this sounds like a great book.
Story Sprouts sounds like a cool book and my kind of read.
Whimsy and imagination give flight to our dreams and thoughts, and help us deal with the every day world in new ways. :)
Hey, Alana! Great to see you here on Cherie's blog! As a fantasy writer (although I've just begun writing contemporary), I'm all for inviting the whimsical, the unexplainable, and the magical into my writing :-)
Congratulations again on STORY SPROUTS!
Tyrean - I couldn't have said it better. How astute of you - and beautifully said!
Hi Rachel - great to see you too! Thanks for the congrats, and best of luck with contemporary! It's fun to switch up genres every now and again! :)
Ellie - Thanks so much! Hope you are able to pick up a copy and enjoy it!
Thanks Christine and Tracy!
(PS - Cherie fans - Rachel Morgan formatted our book and did an outstanding job of it! She's a computer genius. So, when you're at that self-pub level and want to go with someone who knows what they're doing, we definitely recommend her services!)
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