A question I’m frequently asked is where do my story ideas come from? Truthfully, it’s a mystery. I’m as surprised as anyone that my imagination was responsible for the ideas that became The Gift Legacy.
It’s a process
I’ve come to believe that idea generation is a process. It starts with a seed you may not even know you’ve sown. The process is probably some deeply ingrained human problem-solving skill.
Apes in sub-Saharan Africa are likely doing the same thing. While they’re busy picking bugs out of their mate’s hair, their subconscious is working out how to keep the elephants from mucking up the watering hole.
For me, Emelynn Taylor and the idea of an unbidden gift were the seeds. New scenes would pop up at the strangest, often inconvenient, times. I learned not to go anywhere without a notebook and pen. I would jot down ideas that grew from snippets of other people’s conversations, or glimpses of interesting faces. Sometimes it would be an ad or a photo that sparked an idea.
Tuck the problem away
Even now, three books in, if I’m having difficulty with a particular scene, I set it aside and move on to write something else. Sometimes it’s a scene, sometimes it’s a new character, other times it’s a building or location description. The process often shakes loose that elusive idea. It may take a few hours or even days, but eventually the perfect idea trots along.
The more I wallow in the story, the more ideas come to me. Scenes that have no logical ending or segue magically sort themselves out while I’m gardening or vacuuming or peeling potatoes.
So though I don’t know where the ideas come from, as long as my imagination is fertile, I’ll keep sowing seeds and harvesting the ideas. I’ll leave it to my subconscious to figure out how the opposing thumb thing could improve my lot in life.
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