Imaginative Storm Blog

Our philosophy - our writers

The Imaginative Storm is all about generating material rather than trying to “write well.” We encourage you to write randomly, to write what you don’t know, to open up your pen to the gifts of your imagination. We like to call it a dance between the rational mind and the imaginative mind, with the imaginative mind leading the dance.

Most of the posts below are pieces written in 10 minutes by people who attend our Saturday “Prompt of the Week” Zoom session. We’ve chosen them to show you the power and freshness that the Imaginative Storm method generates.

Some pieces are obviously raw material, studded with powerful images and turns of phrase; other pieces are so tight and coherent that it seems impossible that they came out that way, straight onto the page. Even though the goal of Imaginative Storm writing is not to create a finished piece in 10 minutes, sometimes we just can’t help it!

Allegra Huston Allegra Huston

Take your crazy idea seriously and push it as far as you can

You might get a wild idea like this—a dating website offering nonhuman matches—and dismiss it as ridiculous. Diana just went with it and created this fabulous offering out of thin air.

Could it become a fantasy story? Could it be the fantasy of a person in a “real-life” story? Imaginative gifts like these hold myriad possibilities.

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Allegra Huston Allegra Huston

A good writing prompt opens up infinite possibilities

When you allow your imagination to play with a prompt, rather than trying to understand rationally what the image is or “figure out” what you ought to write, the possibilities are infinite. Playful or somber, personal or communal, sensory or philosophical.

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Allegra Huston Allegra Huston

Crash the bizarre into the everyday to give your writing energy

Writing to prompts in this way is practice, like yoga or piano practice, but it can also generate raw material for your “real” writing. What a wealth of unforgettable detail to choose from, if you were writing an office scene in a novel or short story!

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Allegra Huston Allegra Huston

Surprise yourself

Sometimes the most captivating writing surprises takes both the writer and the reader by surprise.

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Allegra Huston Allegra Huston

Mine your imagination for gems

Writing from the Imaginative Storm is mining your imagination for gems. You’re digging in a rich lode—the gems are there, but they don’t always emerge perfectly clean and polished.

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Allegra Huston Allegra Huston

Listen for the music in your writing voice

He’s let his imagination roam, from the image to the events of his day to a bruise on his hand, and trusted that sensibility and music would create threads to join these disparate images and moments and ideas.

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Allegra Huston Allegra Huston

Get your characters talking, and discover where they lead you

About 25 years ago, I was staying with friends in Ireland for a week, and another houseguest was Quentin Tarantino. One night at dinner, someone asked Quentin how he writes, and he said something like this, demonstrating with the available props: “You get your characters talking . . .”

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