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IWW
Practice-W Exercise Archives
Exercise: Imaginings (Version 2)
These exercises were written
by IWW members
and administrators to provide structured practice opportunities for its
members.
You are welcome to use them for practice as well. Please mention that
you found
them at the Internet Writers Workshop
(http://www.internetwritingworkshop.org/).
Prepared by: Don Mackenzie
Posted on: Sun, 19 Feb 2006
Revised and reposted on: Sun, 11 Feb 2007
Reposted on: Sun, 8 November 2009
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Exercise: In 400 words or less, show us a character whose imagination
has a particularly significant effect, either within the story or on the reader.
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Dreaming or imagining is a natural function of ordinary and creative
life. You may be trying to take yourself out of an uncomfortable situation, or imagining the steps you need to take to achieve a personal victory.
Dreaming/imagining can also be an activity that sneaks up on you. It
may undermine your intentions, or if you are more fortunate, point the way to new successes.
Dreaming/imagining is a powerful force that writers should be
encouraged to explore, but caution is needed. The revelation "it was all a dream" is one of the most offensive devices in fiction. Readers object when they feel they have been tricked and the contract between writer and reader has been broken. Surprises are wonderful, but the reader must feel properly prepared and the surprise must be appropriate.
"All men dream, but not equally. Those who dream by night in the dusty
recesses of their minds wake in the day to find that it was vanity: but
the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they may act their dream with open eyes, to make it possible."--T. E. Lawrence, "Seven Pillars of Wisdom"
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Exercise: In 400 words or less, show us a character whose imagination
has a particularly significant effect, either within the story or on the reader.
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When critiquing, explain whether you found it easy or difficult
to draw the line between what was real and what was imagined. Did you find the writing believable or insightful? Are the characters and the setting well drawn?
Web site created by
Rhéal Nadeau and
the administrators of the Internet Writing Workshop.
Modified by Greg Gunther.
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