A couple of us were wandering through the grocery store, looking for words on pre-packaged products that we could use to craft an inspiring message. We were looking for positive words, like Smart and Great and Stupendous. We did find Smart (Smart Food) and Great (“great recipes included inside” on a peanut butter cookie mix); we also found a whole lot of words that were unusable but funny.
So here’s the prompt. Go to the grocery store and wander down the cereal aisle, the cracker-cookie aisle, the candy aisle, and anywhere else that has pre-packaged goods. Scan the products for great words—scrumptious, hot, crunchy, cheesy, sloppy, sizzling, saucy—and then write either a humorous romance scene (or something else) using those words.
For an even more exciting experience, take a writer-friend along, and do the looking/writing/discussing aloud together. You may turn a few heads, but that’s the price you have to pay for art. :-)
We would love for you to post your scenes.
Sunday, January 17, 2010
Wednesday, December 9, 2009
Welcome New MMS Associate Members
We would like to extend a hearty welcome to your newest associate members, who earned rejection letters from Cricket, Spider, and Highlights for Children for short stories that didn't fit the publishers' present needs. Welcome! You're in good company.
In honor of our inductees, My Manuscript Stinks Society would like to invite members and readers to share their favorite rejection letter lines.
Or, if you're not in the mood for revisiting your painful past, take a moment and recommit to submitting your work to publishers. After all, 2010 is fast approaching and to remain in good MMS standing, you need to earn 1 credible rejection a year. Do your part: Submit & get rejected.
Of course, MMS also delights in celebrating successes (our motto, after all, is acceptance through rejection). We'd like to congratulate member Heather Dixon on her book deal with Greenwillow; her exquisitely crafted first novel will be published winter 2011. We'll keep you posted.
Happy writing!
P.S. We've just joined twitter.
Monday, November 2, 2009
100 DAYS! The end is in sight.

Days #95 - #100
Five goals:
1. Write for fifteen minutes: evaluate where your current writing project is and set specific goals for completing it.
2. Write for fifteen minutes: accomplish a goal that you set as part of #1.
3. Write for fifteen minutes: focus on description, imagery, sensory details.
4. Write for fifteen minutes: accomplish a goal that you set as part of #1.
5. Write for fifteen minutes: celebrate yourself--list what you're good at (e.g., character development, imagery, sentence structure, setting details). Then celebrate--go out to dinner, take a walk, buy something--the completion of 100 days.
Oh, and post however you did HERE. We'd love to hear the progress you made.
Sunday, October 25, 2009
100 Days to More Brilliant Writing: Week #19
Monday, October 26 - Sunday, November 1 * Days 91-95
Monday, October 19, 2009
100 Days to More Brilliant Writing: Week #18
Monday, October 19 - Sunday, October 25 * Days 86-90
This is the third to last week! You can do it!
If any of you are like me, there was most likely a prompt during these past 18 weeks that you thought looked interesting, but didn't do for one reason or another. This week's prompt is to do that prompt you didn't do.
For those of you who have done all the prompts, call me and I will buy you an ice cream cone.
Thanks to whirligigdaisy for this idea!
This is the third to last week! You can do it!
If any of you are like me, there was most likely a prompt during these past 18 weeks that you thought looked interesting, but didn't do for one reason or another. This week's prompt is to do that prompt you didn't do.
For those of you who have done all the prompts, call me and I will buy you an ice cream cone.
Thanks to whirligigdaisy for this idea!
Monday, October 12, 2009
100 Days to More Brilliant Writing: Week #17
Monday, October 12 - Sunday, October 18 * Days 81-85
We're down to the last four weeks! Time to shake things up a bit. This week's prompt:
If you primarily write using a computer, write by hand at least one day this week.
If you write primarily by hand, write on the computer one day this week.
If you use both methods equally, or are morally opposed to writing/typing (whichever is not your norm), try writing in a new location. This can be a new location in your home, a new location in your yard, a new location in your town, etc.
Post any interesting discoveries you make about your writing, an excerpt from your writing, or whatever you want.
Complete this prompt and you earn the title Ambicompositional.
Monday, October 5, 2009
100 Days to More Brilliant Writing: Week #16
Monday, October 5 - Sunday, October 11 * Days 76-80
Think of a scene you are working on that you would like to be more visual. Go to Google images and look up a dozen or so pictures for reference. Rewrite the scene after studying the pictures.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)