Create a Story

A Prompt Journal to Help You Write a Story

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Pub Date Apr 27 2021 | Archive Date Mar 10 2021

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Description

Break free from writer's block and channel your creativity. Create a Story provides the building blocks for telling the great stories sitting in the back of your mind.

Through thoughtful prompts and scenarios accompanied by a few choice words to help creativity flow, this journal is packed with stories waiting to be written. Spanning 10 genres (from nonfiction to mysteries and science fiction), these 200 exercises are comprised of a topic that triggers an idea and 15 words to add to your budding literary masterpiece. These prompts and their easy-to-follow structure are followed by ample space for writing; but if the story takes off, don't be afraid to follow it wherever it may lead you.

Historical Fiction:
Write a story about…A spy in the court of Genghis Khan.
15 Word Associations: Mongol, invader, burn, expand, horde, gold, treasure, fear, lie, tribe, poison, magic, spirit, horses, warrior

Romance:
Write a story about…
A couple who has just moved to a place that one person loves, and the other hates.
15 Word Associations: Travel, adventure, escape, beginning, longing, hope, despair, mismatch, opportunity, renew, relearn, fall, break, perspective, thrive

Comedy:
Write a story about…
Your diary is leaked and becomes a best-selling phenomenon.
15 Word Associations: Anonymous, author, write, book, family, friends, life, fame, publicity, search, hunt, disguise, life, persona, announcement

Listen to your muse and write to your heart's content (or discontent if that's more your writing style). Discover the boundless different ways you can creatively use language and explore new genres to round out the quality of your writings. Whether you want to create an expansive world or a slice of life, it all starts with a single word.

The power is in your pen and at your finger tips. Above all, writers write, so get to it with Create a Story.

With so much of our lives and contact going digital, the Creative Keepsakes journals offer an intimate way to nurture your connection with yourself and the people around you. An entertaining way to get off your screen, these guided and free-form journals are great for writers and artists alike. Each journal offers content around a different theme, including silly prompts for a laugh, random yet thoughtful questions, inspiration for art and composition, interactive prompts to learn about your heritage, and blank interiors on high-quality paper stock to use as your creative canvas. Beautifully designed and full of mindful prompts, channel your inspiration as you put pen (or pencil, or marker, or crayon!) to paper to learn more about yourself, your talents, and the people you love.

Also in this Series: 3,001 Questions All About Me, 3,001 Would You Rather Questions, 3,001 This or That Questions, 301 Things to Draw, 301 Writing Ideas, Anti-Anxiety Journal, Complete the Drawing, Create a Poem, Create Comics: A Sketchbook, Design & Destroy, Forever Friends, Gratitude Journal, Inner Me, Inspired by Prayer, Internet Password Book, Mom & Me, My Family Story, My Father's Life, My Grandfather's Life, My Grandmother's Life, My Life Story, My Mother's Life, Our Love Story, Sermon Notes, Sketch - Large Black, Sketch - Large Kraft, Sketch - Medium Black, Sketch - Medium Kraft, This is Me, Write - Medium Black, Write - Medium Black
Break free from writer's block and channel your creativity. Create a Story provides the building blocks for telling the great stories sitting in the back of your mind.

Through thoughtful prompts...

Available Editions

EDITION Other Format
ISBN 9780785839262
PRICE $12.99 (USD)
PAGES 204

Average rating from 26 members


Featured Reviews

A collection of various writing prompts along with keywords relating to those prompts. The prompts themselves are varied but there is not much space allotted for the reader to actually write much down. This book would be a good gift/purchase for someone who enjoys writing or those looking for an interesting journaling activity, but I would not recommend this for library purchase due to the high potential for markup of the book.

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Thought this was a wonderful prompt book! Loved the prompts but thought it was ingenious to include a list of words to use. Can't wait to use it with my Library's writing group. Tons and tons of ideas in this book!

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**I received and voluntarily read an e-ARC from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. All thoughts and opinions are my own.**

I had hoped for a few tips and tricks that I could add to my writing arsenal, but it was a great book full of writing prompts.
Overall, a great book for writers who are looking for some prompts to get their creative juices flowing.

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🅜🅨 🅡🅔🅥🅘🅔🅦 🅞🅕
CREATE A STORY
by the Editors of Chartwell Books
⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐

Now, I didn't read the description properly; I thought this was a book of advice, hints, and tips, about writing your own book.
Well it wasn't, but I wasn't disappointed either.

What you get is a book published by the Editors of Chartwell Books, where each page tasks you with writing a short story. The majority of each page is lined for you to write on, and there are a collection of keywords which you should include. And there are literally hundreds of stories for you to create.

Here's an example page:
"Write a story about a spy in the court of Genkis Khan"
"Use these words in your story: mongol, invader, burn, expand, horde, gold, treasure, feast, lie, tribe, pain, magic, spirit, horses, warrior"

I can certainly see how this book would inspire your imagination and creativity, and although my ARC is an ebook, I'll still be having a go at some of these.

This book will help anyone struggling with creative ideas for their 'work in progress', and I'm happy to recommend it. I gave this book four stars.

Do you agree? As always, your comments are most welcome. If you like my reviews, click Like and Follow for fresh content each week.

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Create A Story is neither a story nor a guidebook -- this is a notebook filled with interesting prompts and wordbanks to get you writing. I wouldn’t have minded a little instruction, but the sheer variety and volume of the prompts makes this a fabulous brainstorming tool.

After two succinct paragraphs of encouragement, you’re dropped right into the prompts. No fanfare, no guidance, just a blank book waiting for you to fill it. Each genre is marked with a cute line drawing in the margin and is discreet enough that mixing genres is easy. The prompted genres include:

Historical Fiction
Mystery & Suspense
Romance
Life Experience
Comedy
Fantasy
Action & Adventure
Horror
Science Fiction
Western

So no matter which genre you prefer, you’re sure to find a prompt that inspires. There’s no guidance whatsoever. This may be encouraging to writers who prefer no instruction, but for inexperienced writers, a few paragraphs on story structure or genre tropes wouldn’t hurt.

The prompts within genres are wide-ranging. In the romance category, you may find prompts as simple as “a prince falls in love with his servant,” to out-there ideas about “a person who is guided by Cupid in their dreams and starts a matchmaking service.” Add that to 15 words to include in the story (arrow, oracle, meddle, arrange, etc) and it’s probably impossible for a creative person to find zero inspiration between these pages.

Overall, this is a great idea-sparking notebook. There isn’t much space to write, but plenty for jotting down ideas and plot points to write elsewhere. A physical copy would make a great gift for anyone suffering from writer’s block.

Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for providing a copy of this title in exchange for my honest review.

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It a fun way to help you get back in storie telling. It challanges you to be creative. I would have liked to see some ilustrations.

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A nice selection of prompts to trigger creativity. Perfect for writer's block. I would recommend if you are an aspiring writer and need a boost!

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"Create a Story" is a very useful journal, and I find it to be a wonderful gift for my friends who have a literary bent.

In 10 different genre sections (historical fiction, murder, romance, et al), you will find 200 prompts to break through writers block. Each prompt provides 15 words to challenge the writer to brainstorm or incorporate into each story. And since this is a journal, you will find a layout where each prompt page provides blank lines to get you started.

One prompt example under Historical Fiction is "Arriving in a small town that has a secret", which suggests the following 15 words: cult, mystery, murder, power, stranger, newcomer, alien, weapon, silence, danger, police, hidden, map, discovery, and bond.

Other very creative prompts I am working on from this collection are:
* waking up in the body of the person you hate
* an artist who lost their muse
* a taxi driver who picks up his doppelganger

And here's a prompt I will share with my Shakespeare-obsessed friend: "Rival gang members fall in love."

Overall, I find this collection to be one of the more inventive writing prompt books I have encountered through the years; I also like that comes in a journal format so the user can jump right in with a sharpened pencil -- to boldly go where few have gone thus far.

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I look at books such as this one through a teacher’s lens. I love the conceit here, the presentation of a prompt, within a genre, with 15 related words to use or inspire. A great model for supporting writing. That being said, as a teacher, I’d be quite selective of the prompts I chose. There are some that feel wrong, especially within the historical fiction section - having kids imagine themselves in some instances doesn’t pan out well. There are some more mature ones as well.

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Look between these covers and find your wild imagination

Posted on February 27, 2021 by michellelovatosbookreviews, world's first book color commentator, book reviews with a twist

Oh no. I never get writer’s block. And I never, ever exercise my “muse” to practice writing. One thing I do, however, is lie about getting writer’s block, and lie that I don’t practice daily. My muse is muscular.
You have to understand the mentality of a writer. I assure you. We have our own unique and colorful personalities. And writers like journals. After all, we create word collections. What better way to accomplish that goal than to write a book? Who cares if it’s a journal. A book is a book. I have boxes of them.
We believe our thought process is like a path. A writer follows his thoughts down a road to self-discovery, fantastical storytelling, and the horror of what truly boils in the center of his mind.
So it is the natural progression of a writer’s thought process that if they had something with which to write their thoughts down on paper, they could remember what on earth they were thinking in the first place.
There’s an entire journaling industry for writers and thinkers. I would know. I have two writing prompt journals on the market at this minute, and both of them sell well.
(Shameless plug: Thank you, Lord for all life’s circumstances and Finding Faith: Stories of wellness and hope.)
Now, back to the column. In addition to writing random thoughts, word phrases, and questions in one location, every writer needs to write … daily.
Me too. That’s why I write this book review with a twist blog.
It started early in my career. I wanted to experiment with my own limits, see where my mind would travel; see how much my hands would say if I put pen to paper, and later, fingers to keyboard.
That’s where Create a Story: A Prompt Journal to Help You Write a Story, to be released in April from Quatro’s Chartwell Books comes into this picture.
Create a Story is an excellent writer’s practice tool. I’d call this a full-body workout for the story creator. Presented in physical form, Create a Story is like a writing coach between two covers.
Sounds racy, huh?
Could be. Depends on how you take it when you crack these covers and begin responding to its many interesting and varied prompt ideas.
The best way to enjoy this journal is to get yourself a reliable dictation program, tablet S pen, phone app, computer file, good old-fashioned paper notebook, or use the journal itself, find a prompt that is calling your name, and start creating.
Who says you have to go in order? Who says you have to hit a word count or a deadline to finish? Just go. Relax and have fun. That’s what it’s about.
Writer’s block can be stressful. I know. I spent years of non-productivity suffering from the overwhelming taunting fear of writer’s block. I went through trauma after trauma without a journal, without a method to release my emotion, my pinned-up muse. I get it.
This book is not a writer’s block remedy – something you pick up from your local book pharmacist’s shelf, down in a gulp, and wait for a Hemmingway revelation.
It’s more like miniature golfing with words. It’s fun. It’s a joy. Look at this book with that thought in your head and, bammo! Writer’s block? What’s that?
Give this book to any human being – or talking animal – with the innate desire and vacuum-attraction to writing. Then pass on this message from me:
Run, writer, run.
Run like the wind.
Run right through your own mind, through your imagination with pleasure and joy. And let the freedom of creative expression surround you. Let the pleasure of storytelling fill you from the inside out.
And enjoy.

BoutiquePublishingService@hotmail.com
BoutiqueBooks@hotmail.com
Happy are those who respect the Lord and obey him. You will enjoy what you work for, and you will be blessed with good things. Psalm 128: 1-2

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Thank you to both #NetGalley and Quarto Publishing Group/Chartwell Books for providing me an advance copy of the publishing group’s reference book, Create a Story, in exchange for an honest review.

#CreateaStory is essentially a personal journal that is divided into ten different writing prompt topics. Each of the ten sections has its own overarching them (or genre) and provides twenty prompts per topic. For instance, under the mystery and suspense section, you would find twenty writing prompts along with fifteen key words that the author challenges you to include in your daily writing.

This is not so much a book as it is a random generator of prompt topics to get your morning pages flowing.

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I love this idea of having writing prompts for a genre and having to use words associated with each prompt.

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I did not get a chance to review this book before it was archived, but I did find it to be helpful in my writing practice. I liked the prompts and found it easy to generate ideas and get to writing. I am trying to develop a regular writing practice, and as I went through the prompts, I didn't use them all but did get a jumping off point from what I found.

Thank you to the author, publisher and NetGalley for an advanced readers copy in exchange for an honest review.

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I received an advance reader copy of this book to read in exchange for an honest review via netgalley and the publishers.

Create a story is a book of writing prompts to help you think of ideas to write a story, help with writers block and get your creative juices flowing. Each page has a writing prompt and then at the bottom of the page it has a list of words to use relating to the prompt for the story.
This book is more of a journal type book and some of the topics/prompts would need additional research of the subject to write a story.
Overall I found this a fantastic book resource and will be giving afew of the prompts a go to try and get myself more into writing my own short stories.

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There’s not really a huge amount to say about this book, a “prompt journal to help you write a story”. It’s a lovely little idea, there’s a large select of prompts, what you then do with it is entirely on you!

The prompts are split into ten genres, with the usual e.g. romance, fantasy, horror, and also some slightly less obvious ones like ‘life experience’. Each page is then a brief prompt, e.g. “Write a story about a magician in the court of an Egyptian Pharaoh”, space to write your story, and then some ‘word associations’ which are 15 themed words to try to get into your narrative e.g. tyrant, crown, labour, survive. (sample of the layout shown in the picture). And that’s really it, for almost 200 prompts.

As the intro says, the point of the book is to help you overcome a bit of writer’s block. You don’t have to work through the book in order – dip into whichever genre takes your fancy (they are indicated in the book by a differing icon in the corner). I really loved the last comment, “Use this journal as a playground.”

Personally, I rather like both the format and the prompts. I was going to list a couple of favourites, but to be honest they’re all rather good – brief enough to allow for maximum creativity, but each with just that spark that makes it really interesting. “A bored employee gets control of the social media accounts of a billion-dollar company”, “Deja vu – or is it?”, “A day in the life of the Voodoo Queen”. Something is just a bit more considered than e.g. finding random prompts online, I’d say. And the constrained space – plus those optional extra words to use – make each seem very doable, too.

Overall I think this is a lovely little book for sparking a bit of creativity. I just hope I don’t owe Chartwell or NetGalley any royalties when one of the prompts gets turned into my best selling novel ;) lol!

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