I was creating a Word document template for my team to use, and I wanted to include a reference number in the header to make it appear on each page. I initially created a field for the user to click and enter the value. The problem with using a simple entry field and sticking it in the header is that it’s grayed-out and easily forgotten.
So, instead of using a textbox field, I decided to prompt the user for the value by using a fill-in field. It’s an easy thing to do, and users of the template will never forget to enter the value. (Of course, they might choose to ignore the prompt, but that’s a different problem!)
To create a fill-in field in Word 2013, do the following:
- Put your cursor in the document where you want the field to appear
- In the INSERT bar in the ribbon, choose Quick Parts > Field…
- In the Field dialog, choose Fill-In as the field name, enter the prompt text, and click OK
- Be sure to save your document as a Word Template
That’s all there is to it. When you create a new document from the template, you’ll be prompted, and the value will be filled in.
Good stuff!
I’m enthusiastic and passionate about creating intuitive, great-looking software. I strive to find the simplest solutions to complex problems, and I embrace agile principles and test-driven development.
View all posts by Adam Prescott
Are you tired of typing the same blocks of text repeatedly in Word? Save yourself time with AutoText entries in Word. Store common blocks of text you type repeatedly.
Are you tired of typing the same blocks of text repeatedly in Word? If you type things often like your company name and address or paragraphs of text common to many types of documents you create, AutoText in Word is your friend.
You can store blocks of text in AutoText entries and insert them into any Word document in several easy ways. Today, we’ll show you how to create, edit, and delete AutoText entries and several ways to insert them into any Word document easily.
Show Paragraph Marks in Your Document
If you want the formatting for all paragraphs, including the last one, stored with the text in the AutoText entry, select the last paragraph mark. The paragraph mark at the end of each paragraph stores the formatting for that paragraph. If you applied any character formatting, like bold or italic, it’s automatically stored in the AutoText entry.
If you don’t see the paragraph marks in your document, click the Home tab. In the Paragraph section, click the paragraph symbol. Now you can see the last paragraph mark and select it.
Create a New AutoText Entry
To create a new AutoText entry, select the text you want to add to your collection of AutoText entries. Or, if you don’t have the text available, type the text into a document and then select it.
On the Insert tab, click Quick Parts in the Text section. Then, move your mouse over AutoText and select Save Selection to AutoText Gallery from the submenu.
You may see other items on the AutoText gallery, like items you copied to the Spike.
Note: You may also notice the Save Selection to Quick Part Gallery option available at the bottom of the Quick Parts menu. This option adds the selected text as a Quick Parts entry, not an AutoText entry. Quick Parts and AutoText entries are both building blocks, and both store text for later use. You could store the entry as a Quick Part, but we’re going to work with AutoText entries in this article.
Because AutoText entries are building blocks, the Create New Building Block dialog box displays.
Enter a unique Name for the AutoText entry. Later in this article, we’ll show you how to enter an AutoText entry into your document just by typing a few characters. To do this, you must make the beginning of your AutoText entry name different from other AutoText entries. If it’s like the names of other entries, you’ll have to type more characters so Word knows which entry you want to insert.
Make sure AutoText is selected in the Gallery drop-down list. It should be by default.
General is selected by default in the Category drop-down list. Initially, it’s the only choice, and we’re going to select the General category for our example. But you can create a custom category by selecting Create New Category from the Category drop-down list. Enter a name for your custom category on the Create New Category dialog box and click OK. The new category is added and selected automatically in the Category drop-down list.
You can enter a Description for the AutoText entry if it helps to clarify what the entry is for. If the entry is self-explanatory, you don’t have to enter a description.
AutoText entries are saved in templates, not in documents. That way, they’re available in any document based on the template they’re saved in. The Normal template is the default selection in the Save in the drop-down list. You can save AutoText entries in custom templates, but we’re going to accept the default to save our new entry in the “Normal.dotm” template.
Note: To save an AutoText entry in a custom template, that template must be open to be available in the Save in drop-down list.
Finally, there are a few Options to choose from:
- To insert the AutoText entry on its own page in a document, select Insert content in its own page. This will set the text from the AutoText entry off from the rest of your document with page breaks.
- To insert the AutoText entry into its own paragraph, even if your cursor is in the middle of a paragraph, select Insert content in its own paragraph.
- For all other content, select Insert content only.
Click OK.
When you close the last open Word document, the following document may display if you have the option enabled to prompt you to save the Normal template.
Click Save to save the “Normal.dotm” template with your added AutoText entry.
Note: If Word doesn’t prompt you to save the Normal template when you change it, see below to turn on the option.
If you don’t get the above dialog box and want to be asked to save the Normal template when you change it, go to File > Options > Advanced. In the Save section on the right, check the Prompt before saving Normal template box. Click OK.
Insert an AutoText Entry from the Insert Tab
There are several easy ways to insert an AutoText entry into a Word document. One way is using the Quick Parts button.
In the Text section on the Insert tab, click Quick Parts.
Move your mouse over AutoText on the menu and click the AutoText entry you want to insert from the submenu.
Insert an AutoText Entry Using AutoComplete
Another way to insert an AutoText entry is to start typing the name of the AutoText entry. A small popup displays showing part of the matching AutoText entry and instructing you to press Enter to insert. Press Enter to insert the entry into your document at the cursor. You can also press F3 to insert the matching entry.
The contents of the AutoText entry are inserted into your document, including the original formatting and line breaks.
If you don’t see the AutoComplete suggestion when you start typing the name of your AutoText entry, the Show AutoComplete suggestions option is not enabled.
To enable the option, go to File > Options > Advanced.
In the Editing Options section, check the Show AutoComplete suggestions box.
Click OK.
Now, you should see your AutoText entry pop up when you start typing its name. Press Enter to insert it.
Add AutoText to the Quick Access Toolbar
You can make it quicker and easier to insert AutoText entries by adding the AutoText button to the Quick Access Toolbar.
Click the down arrow on the Quick Access Toolbar and select More Commands.
The Quick Access Toolbar screen displays on the Word Options dialog box.
Select All Commands from the Choose commands from drop-down list.
Then, select AutoText in the list on the left and click Add to add the AutoText button to the list on the right.
Click OK.
To insert an AutoText entry, click the AutoText button on the Quick Access Toolbar and click an entry on the menu.
Create a Shortcut for an AutoText Entry
If you prefer using the keyboard, you can add a keyboard shortcut for the AutoText entry you created.
Right-click on the ribbon and select Customize the Ribbon.
The Customize Ribbon screen on the Word Options dialog box displays.
At the bottom of the list of commands on the left, click Customize next to Keyboard shortcuts.
In the Categories box on the Customize Keyboard dialog box, select Building Blocks.
Then select your AutoText entry in the Building Blocks box on the right. For example, we select our AutoText entry MyAddress.
Put your cursor in the Press new shortcut key box and press the keyboard shortcut you want to use.
Click Assign.
Your shortcut is added to the Current Keys box.
Click Close.
Click OK on the Word Options dialog box to close it.
Now you can use your new keyboard shortcut to insert your AutoText entry.
Change the Content of an AutoText Entry
What if you need to change an AutoText entry you created? Maybe you moved, and you need to change your address AutoText entry.
First, type the entire changed entry in a new or existing Word document. Then, select it with the last paragraph mark if you want to keep the formatting.
On the Insert tab, click Quick Parts in the Text section. Then, move your mouse over AutoText and select Save Selection to AutoText Gallery from the bottom of the submenu.
On the Create New Building Block dialog box, enter the same name in the Name box as the existing AutoText you want to change.
Click OK.
Click Yes when asked if you want to redefine the building block entry.
Now, you can insert the updated AutoText entry into any new or existing Word document.
Note: Changing an AutoText entry does NOT change the contents of that entry where you already inserted it. The changed AutoText entry is only used any time you insert it after changing it.
Edit the Properties of an Existing AutoText Entry
In addition to changing the contents of an AutoText entry, you can also change an AutoText entry’s properties, like its category and description and which template it’s saved in.
To edit the properties of an AutoText entry, click Quick Parts in the Text section on the Insert tab and select Building Blocks Organizer.
On the Building Blocks Organizer dialog box, you’ll see the full list of all available building blocks with the Name of each, and which Gallery, Category, and Template each is in. They’re listed in alphabetical order by Gallery, which defines the type of each building block.
At the top of the list, you’ll find the AutoText entries. Select the one you want to change the properties of and then click Edit Properties.
The Modify Building Block dialog box displays the same options as the Create New Building Block dialog box you used to create the AutoText entry.
Make any changes you want to the Gallery, Category, Description, Save in, and Options fields. See the Create a New AutoText Entry section at the beginning of this article for more information about these fields.
Click OK.
Click Yes on the confirmation dialog box displays to save your changes and redefine the AutoText entry.
Delete an AutoText Entry
If you decide you don’t need or want an AutoText entry anymore, you can delete it.
To delete an AutoText entry from the list of building blocks, click Quick Parts in the Text section on the Insert tab and then select Building Blocks Organizer.
Select the AutoText entry you want to delete in the Building blocks list.
Then, click Delete.
Click Yes on the confirmation dialog box to delete the entry and remove it from the list of Building blocks.
Click Close on the Building Blocks Organizer dialog box to return to your document.
Save Yourself Time and Reduce Errors with AutoText
AutoText entries are a great way to save yourself time and reduce errors when typing in Word. You can also automate tasks in Word using macros to save time and increase your productivity.
The simplest way for a single item of data is as follows.
First, insert a FILLIN field in the template
(In Windows Word, use ctrl-F9 to insert a pair of the special field code braces { }
then type
FILLIN "my prompt text"
between the { }
so you see
{ FILLIN "my prompt text" }
If you select the field and press F9, you should see a dialog box where you can type the value you need. When you have entered the value, Word should display the value at the location where the FILLIN field is (press Alt-F9 to toggle between «field codes» and «field results» view.
To make Word show the same thing in several places in your document, Select your FILLIN field and press ctrl-F9 again to wrap it in another pair of { } Then, after the initial «{«, type
SET myfield
So that the whole thing looks like
{ SET myfield { FILLIN "my prompt text" } }
Then, at each point where you need the value, insert another field like this:
{ myfield }
which is shorthand for
{ REF myfield }
When you create a new document based on the template, Word should execute the FILLIN, then update all the { myfield } fields. But if the user needs to change the value later, they will need to select the entire document (e.g.ctrl-A) and press F9 to see the prompt again. In that case, I’m not sure the fields will be updated everywhere.
There is another field type called ASK which, in effect, combines a SET and a FILLIN, but it is not automatically executed when you create a new document based on the template so is not such a good choice for this task.
There is a bit more to the FILLIN field than that, but I leave you to look that up.
With the help of the text-to-image model Stable Diffusion, anyone may quickly transform their ideas into works of art.
You must perfect your prompts in order to receive decent outcomes from Stable Diffusion AI. The level of the prompt you provide will directly affect the level of detail and quality of the artwork.
You will find 100+ the most beautiful text-to-image Stable Diffusion prompts and the resulting output in this article, which will undoubtedly treat you visually. You can utilize these prompts also on Midjourney or DALL-E, if you’d like.
Use one of the free Stable Diffusion prompt generators on the market if you usually struggle to come up with good prompts.
Published: 16 September 2022, 9:05 am Updated: 08 Mar 2023, 8:22 am
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Best AI Photography Prompts
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Best AI Portrait Prompts
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a beautiful Cotton Mill Girl, symmetrical, centered, dramatic angle, ornate, details, smooth, sharp focus, illustration, realistic, cinematic, artstation, award winning, rgb , unreal engine, octane render, cinematic light, macro, depth of field, blur, red light and clouds from the back, highly detailed epic cinematic concept art CG render made in Maya, Blender and Photoshop, octane render, excellent composition, dynamic dramatic cinematic lighting, aesthetic, very inspirational, arthouse by Henri Cartier Bresson
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Best AI Concept Art Prompts
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Best AI Architecture Prompts
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environment living room interior, mid century modern, indoor garden with fountain, retro,m vintage, designer furniture made of wood and plastic, concrete table, wood walls, indoor potted tree, large window, outdoor forest landscape, beautiful sunset, cinematic, concept art, sunstainable architecture, octane render, utopia, ethereal, cinematic light, –ar 16:9 –stylize 45000
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Best AI Fashion Prompts
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Best AI 3D Prompts
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Best AI Videogames Prompts
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Best AI Graphic Design Prompts
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a full page design of spaceship engine, black and bronze paper, intricate, highly detailed, epic, infographic, marginalia –ar 9:16
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Best AI Wallpaper Prompts
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A grand city in the year 2100, atmospheric, hyper realistic, 8k, epic composition, cinematic, octane render, artstation landscape vista photography by Carr Clifton & Galen Rowell, 16K resolution, Landscape veduta photo by Dustin Lefevre & tdraw, 8k resolution, detailed landscape painting by Ivan Shishkin, DeviantArt, Flickr, rendered in Enscape, Miyazaki, Nausicaa Ghibli, Breath of The Wild, 4k detailed post processing, artstation, rendering by octane, unreal engine —ar 16:9
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cursed zelda ruins landscape vista photography by Carr Clifton & Galen Rowell, 16K resolution, Landscape veduta photo by Dustin Lefevre, 8k resolution, detailed landscape painting by Ivan Shishkin, DeviantArt, Flickr, rendered in Enscape::8 –iw 10 –no blur, blurry, bokeh, dirty, eyes, face, figure, hair, human, man, noisy, oversharpened, paint flecks, people, person, scratches, skin, text, too dark, too sharp, unclear, underexposed, undeveloped, watermark, woman –w 768 –h 512 –hd –uplight
Best AI Cinematic Prompts
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a highly detailed epic cinematic concept art CG render digital painting artwork: dieselpunk steaming half man half robot. By Greg Rutkowski, Ilya Kuvshinov, WLOP, Stanley Artgerm Lau, Ruan Jia and Fenghua Zhong, trending on ArtStation, subtle muted cinematic colors, made in Maya, Blender and Photoshop, octane render, excellent composition, cinematic atmosphere, dynamic dramatic cinematic lighting, precise correct anatomy, aesthetic, very inspirational, arthouse
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FAQs
What is Stable Diffusion?
Stable Diffusion is a text-to-image ML model created by StabilityAI in partnership with EleutherAI and LAION that generates digital images from natural language descriptions. The technique can also be used to generate image-to-image translations prompted by a text prompt.
How does Stable Diffusion work?
This deep-learning system family includes Stable Diffusion. Stable Diffusion, in particular, learns the relationship between image and text via a latent Diffusion Model approach. Diffusion models function by introducing ‘noise’ into visual data.
Is Stable Diffusion Open source?
This existing quo, however, has recently been challenged by a new player on the scene: Stable Diffusion, a text-to-picture application that enables open-source, unfiltered image production that is free to use for anyone with a reasonable computer and a little technical know-how.
What is a latent diffusion model?
CompVis developed the text-to-image model known as Latent Diffusion, which was trained on the LAION-400M dataset. The model’s user interface was put together by @multimodalart. Try modifying your prompt by including phrases like “oil on canvas,” “a painting,” or “a book cover.”
What is a diffusion model in machine learning?
Since diffusion models are generative models, they can be used to create data that is comparable to the data they were trained on. Diffusion models basically work by erasing training data by adding Gaussian noise one at a time, then learning to recover the data by undoing this noise-adding process.
What was stable diffusion trained on?
Stable Diffusion is trained on a sizable dataset that it mines for patterns and learns to replicate, like the majority of contemporary AI systems. In this instance, the bulk of the training data, or LAION-5B, consists of more than 5 billion pairings of images and text tags that have all been collected from the public internet.
Conclusion
I have experimented with a number of questions across many categories, including general, Metaverse, NFTs, and cryptocurrency. According to the findings, the Stable Diffusion model suffers with upcoming technologies like NFTs, the Metaverse, Web3, VR&AR and blockchain. This is due to the dearth of datasets for these recent developments in technology.
Recall that the Stable Diffusion neural network will continue to be trained using millions and billions of datasets before you go.
Interested in learning more? Here are some additional guides to check out:
Looking to get your story started with a writing prompt? You’ve come to the right place. In this post we detail everything you need to know about writing prompts and give you 500 writing prompts broken down by genre. Enjoy!
I want to be a writer… but what if I have nothing to write about?
Ever feel like you’d love to write but you’re fresh out of ideas? Like there’s nothing else that you could possibly write about, or you have no idea where to even get started? We get it. One of the hardest steps in writing a book is often knowing where to get started. Coming up with content, getting your pen (or pencil) to paper, and letting your creativity flow is a challenge that many writers struggle with. As we know, facing writer’s block and fighting personal writing doubt is common. An overwhelming number of professional authors admit to getting stuck well before they get to the point of selling books on Amazon. Thankfully, there’s an answer to the question of where to turn when you feel like you’ve hit that proverbial wall: the writing prompt.
What is a writing prompt?
We’ve found that sometimes the simplest and best place to begin the writing process is by reading through a selection of writing prompts. These are topics designed to elicit creative thinking or provide inspiration. They can give you the push needed to acknowledge what direction you want your book – or even your daily journal entry – to go in by listing random and inspiring scenarios. These thought-provoking, thrilling, and sometimes funny prompts can send your imagination off and running.
How often do writers use writing prompts?
There’s no right answer to this question because using writing prompts can often be a personal choice. Some authors find it greatly benefits their ability to turn out creative results. Some authors know that they already have the right ideas for a book in their heads. With using writing prompts, you need to decide on what’s best for you. Whatever method helps you generate ideas is what’s best for your writing!
Is there a writing prompt that’s best for me?
You might be wondering if there’s one type of writing prompt that’s best for you. It’s easy to find selections of prompts that are filtered by specific genres (romance, mystery, and so on). However, we recommend sticking to genre-specific prompts if you want your writing to be more focused. With that being said, you never know when inspiration will strike. If your writing needs are less genre-restricted, reading as many prompts as possible may be the best option for you! Whenever I write for fun, I love to read as many prompts as I can across all genres. Hey, you can get some pretty fun ideas for a thriller story from sci fi writing prompts.
Where can I find writing prompts?
Easy – the Internet! And books, too. We recommend checking out our collection of prompts first, but there are numerous great sources throughout the web. Through combing the Internet for great websites and blogs like Reedsy, Screencraft, The Write Practice, Bryn Donovan’s resources, and the @writing.prompt.s Instagram page, we’ve written and gathered 500 writing prompts to help you kickstart your brain into writing mode. Categorized into ten popular genres, we encourage you to grab your mug of coffee or tea, read through our prompts, and get ready to catch the writing bug.
Have any particular writing prompts that help you get focused? Want to tell us about a great website for writing prompts? Feel free to share those in the comments below. Happy writing!
Genres:
- Mystery / Thriller
- Romance
- Science Fiction
- Fantasy / Paranormal
- General Fiction
- Religion / Spirituality
- Travel / Adventure
- Horror
- Children’s
- Young Adult
What are some mystery and thriller writing prompts?
- You find strange, muddy footprints leading up to your front door.
- A stranger sits down next to you on a train and gets up, leaving a package behind. Do you investigate the package?
- You hear news of your next-door neighbor vanishing without a trace.
- One day the national news channel shuts off. And the next day after that, too.
- One day at work, you look across the street to see a hooded figure in a black coat pointing directly at you. What do they want?
- You stumble upon a strange house you’ve never seen before on your morning run.
- You get a text message from an unknown number saying, “Meet me outside. Now.”
- Your parents tell you that they actually don’t know whose child you are.
- Someone puts a large black box on your doorstep. A note on the front reads, “Caution: may bite.”
- You wake up to discover a completely different, unknown face staring back at you from the mirror.
- The protagonist of your story discovers that there is a person who looks exactly like him.
- An international spy group recruits you to be their latest member.
- You begin to realize that your reflection is no longer appearing in mirrors.
- You aunt passes away, leaving you $500,000 in her will under the condition that you resume care for your hundred-year-old home.
- Your best friend tells you that she feels like someone’s been watching her. The next day she goes missing.
- Three words: Long lost brother.
- The day of your wedding, you wake up to find every person in your wedding party has been brutally murdered.
- The FBI begs you to come back to work on a special case. Your former partner has turned and is now wanted for the murders of three co-workers.
- Local gravestones begin disappearing.
- You can solve murders simply by stepping foot at the crime scene. Problem is, no one believes you.
- Write a short story where the protagonist has a doppelganger. (Reedsy)
- Your fingers tensed around the object in your pocket, ready to pull it out at a moment’s notice. (Reedsy)
- You’re sitting by a window watching the flakes slowly and silently fall. Suddenly, you see something outside that snaps you out of your reverie. (Reedsy)
- You’re at a huge store scouting out Black Friday deals. You start to notice that all the security cameras in the store seem to be following your each and every move. (Reedsy)
- You work for the CIA who send you undercover in the FBI, who send you undercover in M16, who send you undercover in the CIA, who are very confused that you are back after only two weeks. (Reedsy)
- A terrorist group has been infiltrated by so many agencies that it is now run by spies, unbeknownst to the spies themselves. This fact becomes apparent to an actual extremist who joins their ranks. (Reedsy)
- Ever since childhood, a dark figure no one else can see has been following you around, whispering in your ear. Today you see it lying a few feet away, screaming and asking you to run. (Reedsy)
- You’ve lived an average life up until today, your 20th birthday. You just found out that your dad is the runaway son of a doting criminal warlord, and your mom is the daughter of an equally doting secret agent. Both family businesses are looking to make you the next heir. (Reedsy)
- She has been walking for hours. Her feet are starting to bleed. But she can’t stop moving… she can’t let him find her again. (Reedsy)
- The morning after a blizzard you make your way outside and slowly start to realize everyone has disappeared. (Reedsy)
- You find a hand-written note on your windshield that says, “Drive west for 100 miles.” (Reedsy)
- You wake up in a jail cell, crusted blood covering your hands. You have no idea how you got there. The cell door clangs open, and an officer walks you to interrogation room where two detectives wait to question you. (Reedsy)
- You walk into your job and find a secret, coded note pinned to your desk. What do you do next? (Reedsy)
- Guard this with your life. (Reedsy)
- A loved one confides in you, but the secret could damage someone else you care about. What do you do? (Reedsy)
- As you’re browsing through a rack of sweaters, someone approaches you and says, “I need you to listen to me very carefully.” (Reedsy)
- Write a short dark comedy in which a long-unsolved mystery is finally cracked. (Reedsy)
- They say a picture is worth a thousand words but you knew the one you’d just taken was worth a million. (Reedsy)
- You were the oldest person still living in the town and you remembered things no one else did. (Reedsy)
- Looking through old family photos, multiple generations back, you notice there is a cat in almost every group photo. The same cat – color, pattern, one docked ear – that is currently purring on your lap. (Reedsy)
- “… and that’s why dividing by three is illegal.” (Reedsy)
- You’re a serial killer who murders anyone you see hitchhiking up your mountain. One day, you pick up a hitchhiker who kills anyone who picks them up.
- You are legally allowed to commit murder once, but you must fill out the proper paperwork and your proposed victim will be notified of your intentions. (Reedsy)
- You hire two private investigators to investigate each other. One month later both come to you to present their findings. (Reedsy)
- 20 years after your daughter was abducted, a detective finds you to reopen the case. The detective turns out to be your daughter. (Reedsy)
- You’re shaking hands with a stranger at a networking event when you ask for their name. “I have no name,” they reply. (Reedsy)
- As you’re paying for your groceries, you mention to the clerk, “There’s a mess in aisle 16.” They give you a puzzled look and reply, “There is no aisle 16.” (Reedsy)
- The detective didn’t realize they were being foiled by a competing detective. (Reedsy)
- The first day you opened your own office as a private investigator, you didn’t expect it to be busy. You were wrong. (Reedsy)
- You are the world’s greatest detective. With your near superhuman intellect, you have never failed to solve a case before. One day, you finally meet your match: a criminal so unbelievably stupid that you cannot possibly comprehend and predict what he’s going to do next. (Reedsy)
What are some romance writing prompts?
- Left at the altar, you decide to seek revenge on your ex.
- You got ditched at the last minute before prom – who will your date be?
- A stranger texts the wrong number, and accidentally sends you a declaration of love. The message is so sweet and heartfelt that you know you can’t let it go.
- A divorced former couple find each other on the same flight to Paris… Sitting next to each other.
- After joining an adult swim league, you realize that your coach is irresistibly cute.
- Your husband accidentally sends you a text meant for his mistress.
- You and a hot stranger get trapped in an elevator.
- Write a love story set at the zoo.
- A college professor and their teaching assistant hit it off a little too well.
- You get to make one wish to create your dream romantic partner. What is it?
- Two strangers on an online chat room hit it off. Turns out they’re childhood sweethearts.
- A parole officer falls in love with his parolee.
- After their catamaran crashes, a husband and wife on their anniversary trip are left marooned on an island in the tropics.
- She’s a burgeoning lingerie model who needs her cute neighbor to take portfolio shots of her.
- An alien falls in love with a forbidden human.
- Desperate for cash, a med student signs up to be a nude model for a retired women’s art club.
- A cutthroat business woman swore she’d never find love until her best friend sets her up on a blind date.
- Two widowed people meet at a community garden.
- A chef decides to embark on an international culinary tour for inspiration and falls in love with their tour guide.
- A daughter tries to set her widowed father up on an online dating app – without him knowing.
- A Republican presidential candidate and Democratic presidential candidate fall in love.
- You are a popular book heroine’s love interest. You now have 60 seconds to convince them that saving the city is more important than saving you. (@writing.prompt.s)
- The love of your life is your brother’s nemesis.
- You fall in love with every person you make eye contact with.
- You’re a mail order bride arriving at her new home for the first time.
- After you move to a new city, you fall in love with your realtor while buying a new house.
- You realize that you’ve fallen out of love with your new wife while you’re on your honeymoon.
- You and your best friends decide to try a new dating app for the first time.
- At your friend’s urging, you begrudgingly attend a Valentine’s Day speed dating event. (Reedsy)
- Every day, you return to your apartment and say, “Honey, I’m home. Oh wait, that’s right… I live alone.” But then one day, a voice replies, “I picked up some pizza.” (Reedsy)
- Cupid offers to shoot an arrow into the person you love. He warns you that if the person already has a pre-existing affection towards you, it will disappear when the arrow strikes. (Reedsy)
- You meet your doppelganger of the opposite sex and find you are strangely attracted to each other. (Reedsy)
- Write a romantic comedy. Difficulty: both lovers are emotionally mature and have excellent communication skills. (Reedsy)
- In the future, romantic attraction is literal: each person is fitted with an electromagnetic bracelet which, they claim, will pull you to your soulmate. It’s the day they turn the magnets on, and you’re waiting. (Reedsy)
- A fortune teller falls in love with their client who has their palm read every month. (Reedsy)
- It wasn’t love at first sight. But now you were starting to see them in a new light… (Reedsy)
- Someone with anxiety falls in love with someone extremely adventurous. (Reedsy)
- The lives of two people are changed forever when they coincidentally meet and engage in a weekend-long affair. (Reedsy)
- They lived in a world where PDA is forbidden. One day, they slipped up and held hands on the street. (Reedsy)
- Two characters who are perfect for one another are foiled by bad timing. (Reedsy)
- Two mortal enemies fall in love when they’re trapped in an elevator together and begin to see the other person’s perspective. (Reedsy)
- Valentine’s Day at a retirement home. (Reedsy)
- Well, that was a New Year’s Eve kiss you won’t forget any time soon. (Reedsy)
- You have the ability to make anyone fall in love with you. You’ve just fallen in love for the first time. Do you use your power? (Reedsy)
- You and your partner finally have the most romantic vacation planned. Problem is, your in-laws decided to tag along at the last minute.
- You never would have guessed that in 48 hours you’d be married. (Reedsy)
- A dog lover and cat lover fall in love… and must find a way to get their animals to fall in love, too.
- You’ve been bumping into the same stranger for months. Finally, you decide to say hello. (Reedsy)
- They might have aged 50 years, but when they held you, those hands felt exactly like they did the first time. (Reedsy)
- An avalanche strands two mortal enemies together… and they start to fall in love.
What are some science fiction writing prompts?
- You wake up one morning to find out that you get to move to any planet of your choosing.
- Your wife is a droid.
- Every day, you get one hour to revisit any moment from your life. What do you pick?
- Gravity no longer exists.
- You are chosen to go on the first ever recreational space journey.
- After people die, their spirits can be brought back from death but at the cost of one random human life. Is it worth it?
- Everyone in the world has the ability to read thoughts. Except for one person.
- You have to power to build one separate planet. How do you build it? Who gets to live there?
- What team do you gather to fight the largest alien and terrorist threat on Earth?
- The world is dying. In order to save it, you’ve been commanded to sacrifice yourself to an invading alien group.
- You are the first person able to breathe in outer space.
- A rare form of cancer is the newest superbug. With a team of scientists, you all must find a cure before the population is wiped out.
- Human beings begin to find themselves growing extra limbs as global warming amps up.
- It turns out humans have been the aliens all along.
- You are in charge of a secretive government agency that aligns people’s fates. Their livelihood is entirely up to you and what you want to do with it.
- Technology becomes illegal.
- All plant life on the planet is wiped out, except for in Florida.
- You are one of the mechanics on the first ever self-flying airplane.
- Walking through the woods one day, you come across a small animal that has the ability to instantaneously clone itself.
- Your whole family has fought in the space military, but you’ve decided to no longer take part in it.
- In an alternate universe where global warming has ruined the planet, you’ve spent your entire life living in an airplane on autopilot.
- You’re a 15-year-old in the middle of a zombie apocalypse. However, a cure has been found that not only rids the infected person of the virus before they turn but prevents it altogether. Only one problem… Your parents are anti-vaxxers. (@writing.prompt.s)
- Nasa engineers monitor the curiosity rover’s actions. All seems normal until the robot suddenly changes its course. The scientists attempt to correct it over and over until they suddenly receive a transmission from the rover: “Will Save Oppy” (@writing.prompt.s)
- What if a nuclear submarine was ordered to launch their nuclear arsenal onto the world? (Screencraft)
- What if the world we live in is actually a computer simulation? (Screencraft)
- What if the past and present timelines began to merge? (Screencraft)
- What if your stepfather or stepmother is actually your future self? (Screencraft)
- What if the sun began to die? (Screencraft)
- What if the universe as we know it is actually someone’s imagination? (Screencraft)
- Everyone on earth begins to experience universal amnesia.
- The year is 2200. What does the world look like to you?
- In the future, we no longer require water, air, or food. We are a super efficient team of robots.
- What do you think happens when the grid goes down?
- Describe your perfect utopian world.
- Your penpal lives on the opposite side of the universe.
- Aliens who only communicate with sign language invade. To avoid war, our governments must engage a vastly marginalized portion of the human population: the hearing-impaired. (The Write Practice)
- A rogue planet with strange properties collides with our sun, and after it’s all over, worldwide temperature falls forty degrees. Write from the perspective of a someone trying to keep his tropical fruit trees alive. (The Write Practice)
- Ever read about the world’s loneliest whale? Write a story in which he’s actually the survivor of an aquatic alien species which crashed here eons ago, and he’s trying very hard to learn the “local” whale language so he can fit in. Write from his perspective the first time he makes contact. (The Write Practice)
- An alien planet starts receiving bizarre audio transmissions from another world (spoiler: they’re from Earth). What does it mean? Are they under attack? Some think so…until classic rock ‘n’ roll hits the airwaves, and these aliens discover dancing. Write from the perspective of the teenaged alien who first figures it out. (The Write Practice)
- Take anything we find normal today (shopping malls, infomercials, products to remove facial hair, etc.) and write a story from the perspective of an archeologist five thousand years in the future who just unearthed this stuff, has NO idea what any of it was for, and has to give a speech in an hour explaining the historical/religious/sociological significance. (The Write Practice)
- House cats are aliens who have succeeded in their plan to rule the world. Discuss.
- A high schooler from fifteen hundred years in our future is assigned a one-page writing project on a twenty-first century person’s life based entirely on TV commercials. Write the beginning of the essay. (The Write Practice)
- Time travel works, but only once in a person’s life. Write from the perspective of someone who chooses to go back in time, knowing they can never return. Where do they go and why? (The Write Practice)
- So yeah, ancient Egypt really was “all that” after all, and the pyramids turn out to be fully functional spaceships (the limestone was to preserve the electronics hidden inside). Write from the perspective of the tourist who accidentally turns one on. (The Write Practice)
- Ten years from now, scientists figure out how to stop human aging and extend life indefinitely—but every time someone qualifies for that boost, someone else has to die to keep the surplus population in check. Oh, it’s all very humane; one’s descendants get a huge paycheck. Write from the perspective of someone who just got a letter in the mail saying they’re the one who has to die. (The Write Practice)
- In the future, neural implants translate music into physical pleasure, and earphones (“jacking in”) are now the drug of choice. Write either from the perspective of a music addict, OR the Sonforce agent (sonance + enforcer) who has the job of cracking down. (The Write Practice)
- It’s the year 5000. Our planet was wrecked in the great Crisis of 3500, and remaining human civilization survives only in a half dozen giant domed cities. There are two unbreakable rules: strict adherence to Life Quality (recycling doesn’t even begin to cover these laws), and a complete ban on reproduction (only the “worthy” are permitted to create new humans). Write from the perspective of a young woman who just discovered she’s been chosen to reproduce—but she has no interest in being a mother. (The Write Practice)
- In the nineteenth century, there’s a thriving trade in stolen archeological artifacts. Write a story from the perspective of an annoyed, minimum-wage employee whose job is traveling back in time to obtain otherwise unobtainable artifacts, then has to bring them back to the present (the 1800s, that is) and artificially age them before they will sell. (The Write Practice)
- Steampunk! Write a story from the perspective of a hot air balloon operator who caters to folks who like a little thrill… which means she spends half her time in the air shooting down pterodactyls before the paying customers get TOO scared. (The Write Practice)
- Creation myth! Write from the perspective of a crazy scientist in the year 28,000 who, determined to discover how the universe began, rigs up a malfunctioning time machine, goes to the “beginning” of the universe, and ends up being the reason for the Big Bang. (Logic? Causal effect? Pfft. Hush, it’s time-travel, and that was never logical.) (The Write Practice)
What are some fantasy and paranormal writing prompts?
- A mysterious creature speaks to you in your dreams and tells you that when you awake, you will have the ability to see into another realm.
- Your pet dragon transforms into a person.
- You are gifted with the strongest, most elusive sword in the kingdom, but if you use it you will never be able to speak again.
- A magical world exists underground. To get there, you’ll need to start digging.
- You wake up and find out that you’re the only living person left on the planet.
- On her deathbed, your grandmother tells you that there’s a hidden treasure buried in her backyard. The family has been trying to locate it for decades. It’s up to you to finally find it.
- The ocean becomes the sky.
- You must save your kingdom from ruin by learning how to breathe fire.
- You have the power to read the lost language, making you the only person to decipher the scroll.
- Fairies are tired of being used for free labor.
- Your favorite fairy tale is now set in 2019.
- You are kidnapped by a knight who demands your assistance in sleighing the city’s most dangerous dragon.
- A man and his wife own the largest potion store in town. Little do the townspeople know, but they’re all being slowly poisoned by the potions.
- A magical toad begins talking to you, but you’re the only person who can hear him.
- You come into possession of a ring that can change the weather to whatever you decide.
- You’re selected to take part in a secretive, underground magic university… but you have to kill someone to go.
- You wake up to find yourself a member of King Arthur’s Round Table.
- An underwater society decides to overtake the world.
- Regular person by day, a shape shifter by night.
- Satan puts you in charge of Hell.
- You are the king. After your daughter was kidnapped by a dragon, you offered the standard reward to whoever rescued her. You weren’t expecting a different dragon to rescue her. (@writing.prompt.s)
- A woman has been dating guy after guy, but it never seems to work out. She’s unaware that she’s actually been dating the same guy over and over; a shapeshifter who’s fallen for her and is certain he’s going to get it right this time. (@writing.prompt.s)
- The cocky main character of a popular book is sent to the real world. He is shocked to find that the fans of his book not only like the villain more but favor his side kick over him. (@writing.prompt.s)
- You’re an immortal who lives at a beach resort. You have many summer flings with mortals on getaways. One day you see someone you had a hot romantic night with 50 years ago. They look exactly the same. (@writing.prompt.s)
- The stars have been watching you your whole life, as you laughed and cried, loved and suffered. Today, you’re finally going to do something that none of them can bear to watch. They blink out, the whole night sky turning dark, just as you’re about to do it. (@writing.prompt.s)
- A lord takes a fancy to a peasant girl and kidnaps her for his own. Little does he know that she’s a trained assassin who has been preparing to take his life for years. (@writing.prompt.s)
- You are the last person on Earth, and you are able to make one wish. What do you wish for?
- You and your family are on a hike when you stumble upon a group of witches in the forest, in the midst of casting spells.
- You have the power to transform into whatever mystical creature you choose.
- You and your ghost best friend are an infamous crime-solving team.
- No, there’s absolutely no way that ghosts are real. Sure, you just saw a mysterious fuzzy figure you appear before you in your house, but that had to be your imagination… right?
- You’re the one human who is capable of seeing ghosts. It’s up to you to save them from being removed from the human world for good.
- You were born to be a villain, but you find yourself leaning more and more towards the good as you get older.
- Spend some time working on world building. How can you create a believable fantasy world that readers can picture clearly? What types of characters does your world include?
- Dream up your own, one-of-a-kind mythical race.
- You and your adventurous crew on a quest for the old King’s hidden gold. Just one problem – so is the rest of your village.
- 10 cm of snow had fallen overnight, just as the weatherman predicted. The only thing is… the snow isn’t white. (Reedsy)
- You start realizing that at least one aspect of every dream you have comes true the next day. (Reedsy)
- You can buy a pill that lets you decide exactly what you will dream about while you sleep. (Reedsy)
- You find a polaroid camera that seems to predict the future: its pictures show what will happen exactly 5 minutes from the moment you take them. (Reedsy)
- You were on your way to see a doctor who promised to know the secret to making yourself fall out of love with someone. (Reedsy)
- Write a story that includes a character hearing their fate by a fortune teller. (Reedsy)
- As a joke, you put on a tinfoil hat. Suddenly your mind goes completely silent. (Reedsy)
- Silence is now literally golden. For every day of total silence a person completes, they receive a piece of gold. (Reedsy)
- A new candy had been invented that allowed the person who ate it to relive any memory they wanted. There was a lineup outside the shop. (Reedsy)
- It’s 1AM at night. But the sun is out. (Reedsy)
- You wake up 10 years younger. What do you do? (Reedsy)
- I wish I could skip next week, you think as you get into bed that night. In the morning, you wake up 100 years in the future. (Reesy)
- They found out about us. They’re coming. They were the words the kingdom had feared hearing for thousands of years. (Reedsy)
- A group of scientists on a submarine are alarmed when they spot what looks like a functioning lighthouse at the bottom of the ocean. (Reedsy)
What are some general fiction writing prompts?
- You’re chasing your dream of being the first person to fly.
- Coffee is illegal and you have to single handedly smuggle it into the country.
- You have to get to the bottom of your family’s deepest secret.
- What was the strangest thing you’ve ever seen in public?
- Detail the life of the person who inspires you the most.
- Imagine what would happen if you woke up one morning unable to see, speak, or hear.
- Think about what you are most proud of. Follow the story of how you got to that point.
- By way of a lottery system, the king chooses you to be his queen.
- Use five points of view to describe one situation.
- Describe the life of a struggling author attempting to make it “big.”
- Tell the story of one woman on the mission to find her lost biological daughter.
- Your dream is to open a restaurant and be a top chef, but how can you do that when you were born without taste buds?
- You’ve just returned home from war only to find your family missing without a trace.
- A famous shoe designer asks you to quit your job and be his latest model.
- You have the power to create, and star in, your own reality show. What does it look like?
- The dark family secret that’s always been hidden comes to light.
- As an 80-year-old, you decide to finally learn how to swim so you can participate in a triathlon.
- Write a scene detailing your greatest fear. Now imagine that has come true for your character.
- What’s the greatest advice you’ve ever been given? What if you lived solely according to it?
- You live in a world with no stress and fear.
- Death has been flirting with you for a long time, but they’ve become a bit annoying. After another attempting to hang out with you again, you jokingly tell them, “If I was the last person on Earth, I’d maybe give you a chance.” Death believes you and will double their efforts.
- When people are born, they are assigned a soulmate. They have a song in their head that only them and their soulmate know. How do you find your soulmate? (@writing.prompt.s)
- Write a story about a character waking up to something absurd. (Reedsy)
- Write a story about a character waking up to the best news of their life. (Reedsy)
- Write a short story with an unreliable narrator that readers can never quite trust. (Reedsy)
- Write a short story in which the main “character” is the setting: for example, a house. (Reedsy)
- Write a story about someone who would be described, above all else, as honest. Or kind. Or intelligent. (Reedsy)
- Using only dialogue, write a short story about a first date, a reunion between old friends, an argument that gets heated, an adult explaining something to a child, or the reveal of a long-hidden secret. (Reedsy)
- Imagine telling the story of a professional hypnotizer. (Reedsy)
- Tell a story through text messages.
- Tell the story of what you would do if you won the lottery.
- Write your own obituary.
- Tell a story from your favorite era.
- Imagine how you would help solve the greatest challenges that the world faces. What would your plan be?
- What would a world be like with no poverty? What would change? What would stay the same?
- Tell the story of the first time that you learned to do something really well.
- Imagine what it would be like to be a pop star.
- Tell a story through song.
- Write from the perspective of your worst enemy.
- Tell a story using only one sense – seeing, hearing, tasting, smelling, or touching.
- After years on the job search, you’ve finally gotten your dream job – but it changes you for the worst.
- You own a tiny mom and pops-type store that you run with your family.
- The worst thing that you could imagine happening happens.
- You’re the judge of the annual pie contest in your hometown but, unbeknownst to you, one of the pies is poisoned.
- You go on a road trip to visit your late father’s grave.
- Tell the story of seeing the ocean for the first time. Or the last.
- You’re allergic to oxygen.
- Imagine what would happen if every person in the world woke up in a good mood every day.
- You’re put in charge of taking care of your elderly grandmother towards the end of her life.
- You get one chance to talk to any person in the world. Who do you choose?
What are some religion and spirituality writing prompts?
- What makes you believe in God?
- God speaks directly to you – what does He say?
- What do you find to be most beautiful in the world?
- You get to build a religion of your own. What do you make it into?
- You must live every single day according to a holy text of your choice. What happens?
- Explore what it means to be religious versus spiritual.
- What helps you meditate?
- What is the greatest wisdom that you would like to impart on the world?
- Who is one religious figure you would like to have dinner with? What do you talk to them about?
- Describe your idea of heaven.
- Detail your favorite story in the holy text of your choosing.
- You live in a world where no Gods exist.
- What does karma mean to you?
- What would your ideal world look like?
- You have the power to make every single person in the world ether religious or nonreligious. What do you do? What changes about the world?
- What makes you a religious or spiritual person?
- Describe what a church means to you. Have you had positive or negative experiences in a church?
- Write a poem about your religious path in life.
- Write a religious comedy.
- What happens when a priest decides he doesn’t want to be a priest anymore?
- Think about what morality means to you.
- What is the difference in good versus evil? How do you know?
- How does one know what is innately good?
- What makes you religious?
- What makes you non religious?
- Put yourself in the shoes of someone who has completely opposite spiritual or religious views from you. Why do they think a certain way?
- Describe what your childhood views in spirituality or religion were.
- What do you hope your religious or spirituality path to look like as you age?
- How would you advise someone to strengthen their faith?
- If you could talk to God, what would you want to say?
- The Southern Baptist Convention elects its first woman president, though she is subsequently removed from the position due to an obscure rule. In protest, every woman leaves the Southern Baptist denomination to form an independent, women-only sect of Baptists.
- God needs a vacation from heaven, so he comes to earth to experience life as a dog. He is captured by animal control and is impounded, and you adopt god-the-dog after a tragedy that makes you question your faith.
- An opiate addict going through severe withdrawal symptoms has a conversation with the Buddha – what did they talk about, and was it the result of a fever dream, or a spiritual awakening?
- You record a video that seemingly shows a woman walking on water at a small rural pond. The video goes viral as proof that Jesus has returned, and Christians begin to wonder if Christ was the Daughter, not the Son, of God.
- A secular Jew and a devout Muslim debate food and faith on a train from Quebec to Montreal.
- What are your personal ten commandments?
- When was a specific moment where you felt a “divine presence” in your life?
- Have you ever felt like you’ve experienced a glimpse into the afterlife?
- What form do you think the afterlife will take, if you believe that it exists?
- Have you ever had an out of body experience?
- William Blake, famous British poet, thought that to love was to be in tune with the divine. Do you think this is true? How have you experienced divine love?
- How have you experienced the divine through love?
- Emanuel Swedenborg believed that there was a soulmate for every person, and that you couldn’t get into heaven until your soul mate had also passed away. Do you believe in the concept of soul mates?
- Do you believe in reincarnation?
- What would reincarnation look like to you?
- Some religions believe that animals and plants have souls. Do you agree with this? Why or why not?
- Describe a particularly spiritual moment in your life. What were you doing? Were you by yourself or with someone else?
- What is your most taboo religious belief?
- Some religions believe that human beings could never truly represent a higher power in art. Do you agree with this? What is an example of art or words that you feel represent the higher power?
- What are your thoughts on love languages?
What are some travel and adventure writing prompts?
- Write about your favorite vacation.
- What culture interests you the most?
- You get lost in a foreign city with no cell phone and no money. What do you do?
- Your favorite chef asks you to join them on a culinary tour of the world.
- What country have you always dreamt of traveling to?
- What’s your dream vacation?
- Tell the story of the worst traveling experience of your life.
- A country of your choosing fuses with North America.
- You and your best friends go on a road trip across America, with no budget and for however long you want.
- You are asked to review a luxury hotel on the beach.
- You are forced to leave your home and move to a remote foreign country. What do you pack with you?
- What about traveling excites you?
- Go back in time to the era of your choosing and describe how you live.
- Rate your top five favorite places in the world. What do you like about each place? What do you dislike?
- If you could have any travel-related job in the world, what would it be?
- You and your partner are kidnapped on your honeymoon.
- Describe a 100-day walking journey around your state.
- Imagine if you had never left your home in your entire life and then were forced to go outside and never come back to your house.
- What do you say to your family in a postcard from a new location?
- Describe what it’s like to sit in rush hour traffic in one of the busiest cities in the world.
- A journey to a new location is disrupted by natural disaster.
- Describe what it’s like to travel with a crippling fear of airplanes.
- What is it that you love about traveling? Explore that feeling.
- What is frightening about traveling? Explore that feeling.
- What stories would you most like to share about the town that you’re from?
- You have the opportunity to move anywhere in the world. Where do you choose?
- Explore what your travels in Asia have been like.
- Explore what your travels in Europe have been like.
- Explore what your travels in South America have been like.
- Explore what your travels in North America have been like.
- Explore what your travels in Africa have been like.
- What is the most unusual place you’d like to travel?
- What do you think is most misunderstood about the culture of your home country?
- What cultural norms are you most interested in exploring from foreign countries?
- Describe the foreign foods that you most want to try.
- Imagine that you are a successful chef in a foreign city.
- Describe a time when you have been excited to explore a new place.
- What is the most beautiful image that you have ever seen while traveling?
- You get to go to any museum in the world. Which one do you choose?
- What is your greatest horror story from traveling?
- What is your happiest story from traveling?
- Picture yourself on a foreign vacation with a person of your choosing. What do you do?
- If you had to move to a foreign country tomorrow, what five items would you pack with you?
- Set the scene for a beautiful beach that you have never traveled to.
- Set the scene for a gorgeous castle that you have never traveled to.
- A three day visit to Budapest becomes a maritime adventure down the Danube River to the Black Sea.
- You are a sales representative for a roulette table manufacturer. While visiting the Harrah’s Cherokee Casino for work, you decide to discard all your possessions, cash out your minimal savings, and hike the Mountains-to-Sea trail from Clingmans Dome to the Ocracoke Lighthouse.
- While en route to visit your college roommate in Kyoto, Japan you meet a stranger at Tan Son Nhat International Airport who needs your help finding a prophetic monk hiding from persecution in Saigon.
- You have to make it from Cairo to Alexandria (Egypt). You have no money. Your only mode of transport is a temperamental camel.
- In a high-stakes game of poker in the French Quarter, you wagered your soul to a voodoo doctor on a pretty bad hand. The only way to null the bet is to find a woman in Port-au-Prince, Haiti who has an item – the only item – the man is willing to trade for.
What are some horror writing prompts?
- You wake up to a world in which all prisons are shut down, releasing dangerous prisoners into your neighborhood.
- A masked stranger appears at your front door with a knife.
- A random number texts you saying, “Don’t forget, you’re next.”
- Someone knocks at your door. You open it to find your deceased grandfather who has come back from the dead to pay you a visit. What does he want?
- Animals take over the world.
- Strange murmuring sounds being to come from the door that leads to your basement.
- While watching the evening news, the anchor looks directly at the camera and begins screaming before the camera cuts to black.
- A polar vortex freezes the entire planet.
- Whatever building you enter, you can see all of the people who died there.
- You wake up in a strange room, tied to a chair, with a single knife on the floor pointed at you.
- A chilling voice appears in your head. It won’t go away. One day, it tells you that you have to run.
- The old cuckoo clock at your grandmother’s home is haunted.
- You’re driving at night when you can’t help but shake the feeling that there’s a person in your back seat.
- One day, while you’re in the shower, you hear your front door open and close. “Hey, roomie, I’m home!” Someone shouts. You don’t have a roommate.
- A strange man living down the street begins leaving presents at your doorstep.
- The cruise ship is haunted.
- While working at a clothing store, you’re closing up the shop for the night when you see five men walk in through the front door and lock it behind them.
- You’re in the middle of a bank robbery – hiding in the bathroom.
- Your dog won’t stop barking at a sunken spot in your living room floor.
- For the last few days, you’ve been getting ominous messages written in blood on your bathroom mirror. Turns out, they’re from an awkward ghost with a serious crush on you. (@writing.prompt.s)
- The reason no one has ever seen the real Santa Claus is because everyone who sees him dies. You just saw him and now you need to survive. (@writing.prompt.s)
- You wake up bound to an electric chair, moments before your imminent death.
- A woman afraid of clowns is forced to work in a travelling circus. (Screencraft)
- A treasure hunter finds a tomb buried beneath the dirt. (Screencraft)
- A bartender serves last call to the only remaining patron who is the Devil himself. (Screencraft)
- A boy’s stepfather is actually a murderous werewolf. (Screencraft)
- A man wakes up with no mouth. (Screencraft)
- Deceased soldiers return to their Civil War-era homes. (Screencraft)
- Suburbia is actually purgatory. (Screencraft)
- A man suffers from sleep paralysis at the worst possible time. (Screencraft)
- A man murders his wife while sleepwalking.
- What appears to be a ghost approaches your car while you’re waiting at a stoplight.
- It’s late at night, and you hear footsteps in the cellar—but you’re definitely home alone… or so you thought. (The Write Practice)
- You’ve put that doll in the cabinet, in the closet, in the attic, but no matter where you tuck it, it always shows back up on the sofa. On Halloween night, you come out to find it watching you… (The Write Practice)
- A bad-tempered businessman is driving home after a long day of work. He thinks he sees his kids trick-or-treating and stops to pick them up—but those aren’t costumes. (The Write Practice)
- A young woman goes to her grandmother’s house for tea on Halloween night. They have a wonderful time together, sharing stories, joy, and the best times of family. The next day, the woman learns her grandmother has been dead for a week and no one could get ahold of her to tell her. (The Write Practice)
- Aliens have just landed on Earth—and boy, did they pick a weird day to come. How do they respond to Halloween, supernatural or otherwise? Do they decide this place is just too bizarre and get the heck out . . . or do they stick around and join in the fun? (The Write Practice)
- On Halloween night, lovers get to come back and spend the evening together one more time. One couple from the Roaring Twenties decides to come back from the grave to help their extreme nerd great-grandchild or the kid will never get married. (The Practice)
- A little boy’s lost in the woods, but at least his faithful dog is with him. As they look for the way out, the dog defends his master against terrifying monsters and animals. Finally, the boy arrives safely on the other side, beautiful green field, no more fog or night. Then the dog goes home . . . where his owner, the little boy, has died. The good doggy guarded him all the way to his final rest. (The Write Practice)
- You wake up in the middle of the night to see a dark figure crawling across your floor.
- Moments after taking off for a flight, the entire plane begins to shake dramatically. The pilot comes on the speaker and says, “This is very bad.”
- You awake in a dark, small box and can hear strange noises outside.
- Several weeks after buying your dream house, you start getting strange letters delivered in the mail warning you to move out.
- Your dog has been acting very strangely recently. Some would say… almost human.
- You stumble across a website that contains clues to some very disturbing crimes.
- As you’re settling in to bed for the night, you hear an unusual scratching sound at your bedroom window.
- You’re on vacation in a new city for the first time. As you walk down a busy boulevard, you suddenly look up to realize you have no idea where you are or how you got there. Come to think of it, you don’t even know who you are.
- On your way to work, you notice that no one is driving on roads. The busy rush hour traffic is nonexistent, and there are no people walking around, either. It’s just you. What’s going on?
- You discover, much too late, that your downstairs neighbor is a cannibal.
- During a renovation of your home, you and your spouse find human remains underneath your back porch – a crime that you are now being charged with.
What are some children’s writing prompts?
- Your dog begins speaking in a human voice one morning.
- The sky turns purple.
- Your best friend’s head turns into a mushroom.
- Dinosaurs come back to earth.
- You and your family rescue a turtle who was hit by a car and nurse him back to health.
- You turn into a goldfish.
- What would happen if you could turn any food into cotton candy?
- Rain turns into soda.
- Your family adopts a pet monkey.
- The new kid at school wants to be your friend, but you’re very shy.
- You and your boy scout troop get lost in the middle of the forest.
- Your parents tell you they’ll give you $20 if you eat your vegetables with every dinner. Do you do it?
- Write about a special memory from your childhood.
- What parent were you closest do? What are some of your favorite memories of spending time with them?
- Write about yourself at age five.
- Write about yourself at age ten.
- What was your greatest dream when you were a child?
- Write about your favorite childhood pet.
- Get inspiration for your writing by thinking about a vacation you took as a child.
- What would happen if you woke up one day and kids ruled the world?
- Tell the story of a child who has just transferred to a new school.
- Tell the story of a platypus.
- Imagine running away with a group of your childhood best friends – where would you go?
- Dream up your own imaginary world.
- Children’s books are known for their fun and creativity. What’s the craziest, kookiest new breed of animal you can imagine?
- Give advice to new parents.
- Give advice to your younger self.
- Imagine what it would be like to live in a world where instead of taking the school bus, you ride a dragon to classes!
- Write about your favorite childhood game.
- Tell the story of a family who decides to hire a new babysitter or nanny.
- Your parents tell you one day that you’re going to be a big sister – but you really like being the only child!
- If the world could be any color, what would you want it to be?
- If you could taste a specific flavor any time you ate something, what would you want it to be?
- Describe a trip to the zoo with your class.
- You and your best friends get to leave school to have lunch anywhere in town. Pizza, candy – anything! Tell the story of where you go.
- Tell the story of your first time at summer camp.
- Tell the story of your first time away from home.
- What if we lived in a world where kids were treated like adults? And adults were treated like kids?
- Take a spin at your very own Dr. Suess-esque book and use rhymes to tell a kooky, crazy story!
- You’re in charge of babysitting your little sibling for the first time.
- You decide to run away from home – what are some of the challenges that you face?
- Picture a world where everything is upside down! What’s life like for you?
- Write a book advising children on how to overcome adversity.
- Write a book advising children on how to be a good friend.
- Write a book advising children on how to be a kind sibling.
- Bobby the Bunny wants to make friends with a fox pup who recently lost its family.
- A giraffe and an ostrich live together in a zoo, where they bond over similar neck characteristics and learn how to play one another’s games.
- A dragon wants to be loved and befriended, but every time he farts, fire erupts from his rear end.
- Bruce the German Shepherd loves to run through the woods with his human. When he and his human get separated from one another, Bruce has to learn from his forest friends how to get back home.
- Tell the story of the tooth fairy… Imagine that she just started her job and has to be trained.
What are some young adult writing prompts?
- It’s your first day of middle school. But when you’re half human, half dragon, that makes things a little tough.
- What happens when you begin working at the same yogurt shop as your crush?
- Both of your parents die in a car accident, leaving you an orphan who gets shipped off to your mysterious aunt’s house in Europe.
- One day you find out that you never have to return to high school. What do you decide to do instead?
- You’re chosen to go on a school trip to Africa where you’ll be helping to build wells. You’ve never been out of the country, though, and are worried.
- Your mom disappears one day, and you never see her again.
- Tell the story of the best high school summer of your life.
- Your boyfriend gets in a horrible car accident and ends up in the ICU. Another girl is found in the car with him, too – but she died. Who is she?
- You find out that your brother is adopted.
- During her freshman year of college, she found out that people in her dorm started to disappear. Almost from thin air.
- A group of high school freshmen learn that the teachers and administrators at their boarding school are actually human like AI working towards the Singularity and human enslavement. If they don’t act fast, the robots win.
- A group of at-risk teenagers are on an overnight camping trip with a wilderness counseling group in Badlands National Park when an arctic blast forces them out of a blizzard and into a cave. On day three, their counselors go out in search for help – and never return.
- Your high school sweetheart dumps you suddenly because of something you posted on social media. But you didn’t post it, and you have to figure out just how different – and difficult – your life is now that you’ve been hacked.
- Imagine that the world is run amok with vampires. Or zombies. Or authoritarian dictatorships in a dystopian future.
- In the near future, climate change has led to the extinction of butterfly and bee pollinators. A small group of teen geniuses band together to develop autonomous, robotic insects to replicate the functions of insect pollination before the global food shortage turns from disastrous to extinction-level.
- You find out that your best friend’s dad is responsible for the growing number of missing people in your hometown. How do you get everyone to believe you?
- You did it – after years of hard work and try outs, you finally won the coveted spot on the football team. But here’s the thing – you’re the first girl to ever play.
- One night you wake up to find yourself levitating over your bed. The next morning, strange wings start to grow from your shoulders. Are you turning into some sort of mystical bird?
- It was pretty freaky to wake up for school one morning, only to see that my parents were literally frozen into blocks of ice in the kitchen. Even freakier? Every adult in town is frozen solid, too.
- A boy pursues his list of wildly ambitious New Year’s resolutions, with hilarious and touching results. (Bryn Donovan)
- A girl on the swim team transforms into a part-time mermaid. (Bryn Donovan)
- A group of “outsiders” become a clique that eventually excludes others. (Bryn Donovan)
- A girl’s favorite author plagiarizes her fanfiction. (Bryn Donovan)
- A boy learns who believed his sister died finds out she’s very much alive. (Bryn Donovan)
- A teenager’s best friend goes missing—and is widely believed to be the murderer of a family member. (Bryn Donovan)
- Two teens begin to write a fantasy novel together and then cross over into the world they’ve created. (Bryn Donovan)
- In a dystopian future, college admissions boards have access to video footage of students’ entire lives. (Bryn Donovan)
- A girl always hangs out at a particular little nook at the library. Then the same boy starts taking the space every day. (Bryn Donovan)
- A boy learns something terrible about his parents.(Bryn Donovan)
- In a modern-day Ferris Bueller’s Day Off, three girls ditch class for a day filled with adventures. (Bryn Donovan)
- 35. A girl who wants to be a virgin until she gets married faces social pressure about her decision. (Bryn Donovan)
- A teen gains the ability to take the form of any other person she chooses. (Bryn Donovan)
- A girl’s science fair project yields results that attract the government’s attention. (Bryn Donovan)
- A teen’s suspicions about a teacher lead him to conduct a private investigation. (Bryn Donovan)
- A girl struggles with the decision to tell authorities about what the star quarterback did. (Bryn Donovan)
- Soon after a boy was born, his father went missing. Now, a skeleton has been discovered in the basement of their former home. (Bryn Donovan)
- You check out a book from the library and discover that it’s telling the story of your life. Do you decide to read ahead and find out what happens, or let it be a surprise?
- Your beloved dog goes missing, resulting in a cross-country chase to reunite her with your family.
- Put yourself in your favorite anime or manga series. What type of character would you play?
- You and your best friends have been playing in a band in your mom’s garage for years. Now you’ve gotten discovered by a major Hollywood scout, but they only want you to go on to fame.
- Some friends go to an escape room only to discover it’s being run by one of the most elusive serial killers in history.
- After going to see the circus with your parents, you decide to run away to join the troupe. What act do you take on?
- What would you tell your younger self as a teenager? What do you wish you had done differently, or not done at all?
- What would your younger self tell you now? What would they think about your life?
- Tell the story of someone who switches places with themself as a 14-year-old.
- Think Princess Diaries – you’ve just found out you’re part royal with a massive inheritance to look forward to. What changes about your life?
- A small spaceship crash lands in your backyard with nothing inside but an instruction manual on how to rebuild the aircraft. Do you take it back into space?
- You have the power to shift into whatever creature you want – bear, wolf, etc. When do you choose to utilize your powers?
- What would happen if you changed places with a rockstar?
- Your big brother has always been the more successful, studious one of the family. You’ve finally got a chance to prove yourself and one up him – how do you do it?