What Are The Best Fiction Writing Exercises For Beginners?

2026-06-15 23:23:11
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Helpful Reader Firefighter
Fiction writing can feel overwhelming at first, but the right exercises can make it way more fun and less intimidating. One of my favorites is the 'character interview'—pretend you’re sitting down with your protagonist (or even a side character) and ask them anything from their deepest fears to their favorite snack. It sounds silly, but it forces you to think beyond the plot and really flesh out their personality. I once spent an hour 'interviewing' a grumpy old wizard I’d created, and by the end, I knew exactly why he hated birthdays (long story involving a cursed cupcake). Another great one is the 'five-senses challenge': pick a random object—like a coffee mug or a tree—and describe it using all five senses without using any clichés. It sharpens your observational skills and makes your descriptions way more vivid.

Another exercise I swear by is writing a scene entirely in dialogue, no narration allowed. It’s brutal at first, but it teaches you how to reveal character and plot through what people say (and don’t say). I tried this with two characters arguing about a missing cat, and by the end, I’d accidentally uncovered a whole subplot about neighborhood politics. For beginners, I also love 'flash fiction' prompts—writing a complete story in 100 words or less. It forces you to cut the fluff and focus on what really matters. There’s a weird magic in trying to pack emotion, conflict, and resolution into such a tiny space. Plus, it’s low-pressure because if it doesn’t work out, you’ve only 'wasted' 100 words. Last tip: steal from real life. Eavesdrop on conversations at the grocery store, jot down weird dreams, or rewrite a boring moment from your day as if it were a thriller scene. Reality is stranger than fiction, and it’s full of free material.
2026-06-21 10:17:02
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My brain lights up at tiny story seeds, so here’s a cozy starter pack for anyone wanting to dive into flash fiction. I often write in short bursts between errands or over a late-night bowl of noodles, which makes these prompts feel like little snacks you can nibble on. Prompts: 1) A neighbor returns something you never knew you’d lost — but it isn’t physical. 2) A storm knocks out power and two strangers share a single memory lamp. 3) The protagonist keeps finding sticky notes with the same sentence in different handwriting. 4) A city pigeon becomes the unlikely guardian of a secret letter. 5) Someone receives a voicemail dated ten years in the future. Quick tips: pick one emotion and let it guide every choice, start as late as possible in the action to keep the length tight, and aim to make the final line reframe everything before it ends. Try writing the first draft in 20 minutes and then trim. Also, reading tiny pieces like 'The Little Prince' reminded me how much can live in small moments — try stealing that quiet focus and applying it to your own micro-worlds.
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