The Ink Well Fiction Prompt #165

in The Ink Well7 months ago

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Source: Pixabay on Pexels

Welcome to the Weekly Fiction Prompt

Hello community members! Thank you for joining our weekly writing prompt! If you're new, be sure to check out our community rules before posting in The Ink Well. (You can find them at the top of our home page. And you will find all kinds of great resources for fiction writers in our catalog of fiction writing tips.

Stories from the Previous Week

Thank you to who posted a story for last week's prompt: "Hope":

Author Shout-outs

We'd like to call out a few stories that got high marks from our curators.

@universoperdido

The Agonizing Wait of the Master

Curator comment:

@universoperdido writes in a distinctive, original voice, and yet one hears in his words echoes of writers who have come before. He is heir to a legacy of great writing. One can hear Borges, and Unamuno in his words. What one cannot do is leave the piece and forget about it. The story will stay with the careful reader. It is a well-crafted tale in which there is left in the reader a doubt about the character and motivation of the narrator. The doubt is carefully cultivated by the author. Every word in the story pulls its weight. The writing is clear and powerful.

@popurri

Seeds of Hope

Curator comment:

Popurri delivers a spectacular melodious, lyrical gentle fiction about a family’s struggles. The family finds faith enough to overcome the “changes” thrown at them by fate and nature and finds hope in understanding the symbiotic relationship between man, God and nature. This simple story will make you laugh and cry while you absorb the pulse of its perfect rhythm. Gorgeous! This is a must-read!

@iskawrites

Children Are the Living Messages We Send to a Time We Will Not See

Curator comment:

@iskawrites shares a story for the Hope prompt. A young girl, Sara, is living with cystic fibrosis, and a poor prognosis. She asks Santa for the gift of a sibling to heal her parents heart when she has passed, and is disappointed when no child arrives. So she writes a letter to God, asking for her request to be fulfilled, and for the chance to meet her sibling before she herself passes away. She has a vision of a baby girl being gifted to her at Christmas. Shortly thereafter her mother finds out that she is expecting another child. Her pregnancy goes beyond the expected due date by 3 days and sadly that is just too long for Sara, who passes away just before the baby is born. Not going to lie. Feeling a little emotional reading this. Beautifully conceived story by Iska. Nicely researched. Fortunately, these days people with CF have a longer life expectancy into their 40's on average and some even live into their 70's. It's a terrible disease and no child should ever have to suffer with a life-limiting illness. No child can ever replace another, but what a blessing the new baby was, for both Sara and her parents. My heart wishes that Sara had been allowed to meet her little sister.

@jjmusa2004

The Interview

Curator comment:

In response to the hope prompt, @jjmusa2004 offers a carefully constructed, effectively written story. A young woman wakes from her sleep to the buzzing of an alarm. She realizes she has overslept on a very important day, the day of her job interview. Traffic does not favor her journey to the interview, and she arrives late. As she begs security to let her in, one of the bosses passes by and instructs security to open the gate. The interview goes well, although the protagonist is the last of many to be interviewed. In the end, when the protagonist arrives home, she falls into bed and, briefly, a sleep. This sleep is interrupted by the ringing of a phone. She got the job. This story is tight. It has a symmetrical structure, which is aesthetically satisfying.

Fiction Writing Prompt of the Week

This week's prompt is: "Dreamcatcher."

What to do with this prompt?

Everyone dreams. And we have very little control over those dreams, or their effect on us. But in the traditions of the Ojibwe culture, they believed that a dreamcatcher could trap bad dreams and let good dreams through.

You could write a story about a person who makes dreamcatchers and can add special magical powers to them. Or you could write a story about a child who has nightmares every night until his mother installs a dreamcatcher over his bed. Dreams and nightmares and dreamcatchers have many possibilities!

Remember, as always, we are looking for the elements of story. These include:

  • Great first lines
  • Good settings
  • Well-developed characters
  • Integration of action, dialogue and narrative
  • A conflict that intrigues the reader
  • A "story arc" which results in the resolution of the conflict and brings the story to a satisfying conclusion
  • And of course, we are looking for well-edited stories that are not littered with typos or grammatical errors

You can find more on all of these topics in the catalog of fiction writing tips.

If you don't feel inspired by this prompt or the featured image, feel free to peruse any of our past prompts or our collection of idea-generators:

Writing Prompt Guidelines:

  1. See The Ink Well FAQ: Before you post in The Ink Well, we ask that you read our FAQ post to familiarize yourself with our important community rules and guidelines.
  2. Story link: Please be sure to post your story in The Ink Well community, and post a link to your story in a comment on this post.
  3. Hashtags: Please use these hashtags: #fiction #writing #inkwellprompt #theinkwell — as well as #dreemport, if you are also posting your story to the DreemPort site.
  4. Community support: When you post in The Ink Well, please be sure to visit the work of at least two other community members and comment on their work.
  5. Title: The title is up to you. You can come up with any title you wish. You do not need to name it after the prompt. Please do use the prompt word(s) within the story.
  6. Images: Please only use images from license free and creative commons sites, like Pixabay, Unsplash and Pexels. Images you find on the Internet are copyright protected and cannot be used. Be sure to provide all image source links.
  7. Length: We request that story word counts are a maximum of 1,500 words in length and ideally 750-1000 words. This is just a guideline. Longer stories are okay too, but they tend to get fewer readers. Additionally, The Ink Well admins appreciate keeping to that maximum story length for our time management. (Note: We generally consider stories less than 750 words "too short!")
  8. Translations: If you post a story that has been translated from another language, please include both the English version and the translation.

Reminders: Be sure to also read our community rules. As always, please avoid violent, gory, bloody, brutal, sexist or racist themes and language, NSFW (not safe for work) stories like erotica, stories with a political or religious agenda, and stories featuring abuse of any kind. (We have a complete article about The Ink Well stance on violence and brutality for more information.) And do NOT use AI tools to write your stories. You must provide your own unique content.

Past Prompts

Here are the past prompts if you would like to use them or refer back to them:
#1: Heart and Soul; #2: The moment when...; #3: Beauty with a twist; #4: The Way Home; #5: A Matter of Time; #6 50 Story Ideas; #7 The Library; #8 All the way to tomorrow; #9 Legend; #10 Three Words; #11 World Building; #12 Childhood Summers; #13 50 Imagination Ticklers; #14 Railroad; #15 Cats - 750 words; #16 Your Birthday; #17 Action, Dialog and Narrative; #18 Change; #19 Tea Time or Tee Time?; #20 Summer Camp; #21 Main Street; #22 Fireworks; #23 Picnic; #24 Run; #25 A word of advice; #26 Winding road; #27 Mirror; #28 Shipwreck; #29 School Notes; #30 Three Words: Scooter, River, Midnight; #31 Flash Fiction Contest; #32 A Fork in the Road; #33 Shadows; #34 Three Words: Island, Witch, Cake; #35 Full Moon; #36 Graveyard; #37 Jack-o-Lantern; #38 Family Ties; #39 Longing; #40 Feast; #41 Gift; #42 Season of Light; #43 Believe; #44 Elf; #45 Holiday; #46 New Year; #47 Unlikely Hero; #48 Inheritance; #49 Under the Light of the Moon; #50 Three Words: Shoes, Mood, Adventure; #51 They're Here; #52 Artist; #53 Headlights; #54 Tomorrow; #55 Lense; #56 Perfection; #57 Making and Breaking Rules; #58 A Reckoning; #59 Blossom; #60 Temptation; #61 Happiness; #62 Footprint; #63 Frequency; #64 Sailing; #65 Fortune; #66 Worry; #67 Adventure; #68 Shadow; #69 Motor; #70 Embarrass; #71 Proud; #72 Guide; #73 Impression; #74 Lost; #75 Wonder; #76 Tear; #77 Splash; #78 Brilliant; #79 Sinkhole; #80 Exhaust; #81 Roll; #82 Wishbone; #83 Chatterbox; #84 Foil; #85 I can't believe you said that; #86 Boo; #87 Midnight; #88 Hunger; #89 Light; #90 Spirit; #91 Fire; #92 Tend/Tender; #93 Cheer; #94 Appearance; #95 Ambition; #96 Trust; #97 Fly; #98 Comfort; #99 Fate; #100 To Create; #101 Vision; #102 Sympathy; #103 A Special Time; #104 Suspense; #105 Bride, stairs, illusion; #106 Reality TV; #107 Things the Go Bump in the Night; #108 First line: Two strange things happened that day; #109 What if that loose floorboard was actually a hidden passageway?; #110 Footsteps; #111 Mess; #112 Cards; #113 Elephant; #114 Crystal; #115 Phone call; #116 Date; #117 Chocolate; #118 Three words: wish, button, sky; #119 RSVP; #120 Objets d'art; #121 Soul; #122 Scuttlebutt; #123 Recall; #124 Doorway; #125 Beacon; #126 Seagull, Market, Box; #127 Window; #128 Terrified; #129 Dance; #130 Two endings; #131 Ghosted; #132 Treasure; #133 Taste; #134 Reunion; #135 I miss you; #136 Wonder; #137 Ruins; #138 Beach memories; #139 There was something in the wind; #140 Mask; #141 Halloween; #142 Photo album; #143 Dreams; #144 Crayon box; #145 Back of beyond; #146 Intuition; #147 Delight; #148 Anticipation; #149 Holiday memories; #150 Resolution; #151 Bicycle; #152 Flight; #153 Time Travel; #154 A trip to the fair; #155 Don't sell me a dog; #156 Gravity; #157 Love, wheelbarrow, dog; #158 Stealing; #159 Sportsmanship; #160 Toast; #161 Pickle; #162 You only live once; #163 Ring; #164 Hope/sub>

Thank you for being a part of The Ink Well!
@jayna, @gracielaacevedo, @yaziris, @itsostylish, @samsmith1971 and @agmoore

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We invite lovers of creative writing to visit The Ink Well, a Hive community started by @raj808 and @stormlight24 and run by @jayna, @gracielaacevedo, @yaziris, @itsostylish and @samsmith1971.

How to Follow Our Curation Trail

You can follow our curation trail by going to our hive.vote curation trail page and clicking the follow button.

Note: The Ink Well is now paying out curation rewards to our delegators!

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We welcome delegations! These support our community in many ways, including helping us to provide support to quality content creators through curation and contests.

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A big thank you to all of our delegators:
@jayna, @felt.buzz, @itsostylish, @blueeyes8960, @agmoore, @marcybetancourt, @marlyncabrera, @stormcharmer, @juniorgomez, @iamraincrystal, @preparedwombat, @gracielaacevedo, @timix648, @samsmith1971, @jackdeathblack, @josemalavem, @riverflows, @generikat, @mineopoly, @hazmat, @treasuree, @innfauno12, @kingsleyy, @popurri, @nancybriti1, @marynn, @universoperdido, @rinconpoetico7, @nathy33, @iyimoga, @morey-lezama, @evagavilan2, @moneykeep, @mrenglish, @stuartcturnbull, @funshee, @amiegeoffrey, @balikis95, @cool08, @rukkie, @raymondpeter, @emreal, @tomiajax, @kushyzee, @jjmusa2004, @rare-gem, @ricurohemi28, @benwesterham, and @shakavon.

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I'm honored for your wonderful and kind feature and words. This means a lot to me. Congrats to other featured authors

Congratulations to all the winners. Those were fantastic stories.

Thanks so much for the mention

Here is my post :

@zino01/a-childhood-wonder-rekindled

Supported @treasuree @wongi

Great
Congratulations to all mentioned. Any new week or prompt week is upon us. Lets make the best of it

Oh, I loved the curator's text!
Thanks for the honorable mention. It really is very motivating. Congratulations also to the other mentions, they have done a great job.

I like this week's word, my mind is already generating a story. Hugs!

This is my entry for the ink well fiction prompt
#165 https://peakd.com/hive-170798/@somuchgrace/a-swallowed-pride

We go again 👍

My story is loading 😁

Congratulations to the featured writers 🌹

Here is my entry @tommyik/a-gift-turned-curse

I am honoured to have my story mentioned. Thank you so much, Inkwell 💖💝❣️

Congratulations to other featured authors 🥳🥳🥳

Here's my entry for this week's prompt

https://peakd.com/hive-170798/@iskawrites/its-time-to-break-the-curse

https://ecency.com/hive-170798/@nancybriti1/fiction-the-hidden-side-of
My participation this week. May God multiply the luck among all of us. Greetings

Congratulations to all the authors who shined with their beautiful stories. A round of applause for everyone!

I also take the opportunity to share Rincón Poetico's participation in the weekly message.
https://peakd.com/hive-170798/@rinconpoetico7/fiction-the-power-of-light-el-poder-de-la-luz-enes

Congratulations to all mentions

Here's my entry

https://peakd.com/hive-170798/@jjmusa2004/mr-ogre

Congratulations to the featured writers. Here's my link;

https://ecency.com/hive-170798/@balikis95/the-blue-pill

I supported,

-moaz-sabir
-fashtioluwa
-jjmusa2004

Here is my entry

https://ecency.com/hive-170798/@emreal/the-gift

I supported zyzymena and teknon

Here is my entry for this prompt

https://peakd.com/hive-170798/@mrenglish/olanmas-oror-the-ink-well-fiction-prompt-165

I engaged on the posts of the following authors: @balikis95 @zyzymena @emreal and @kei2

Supported Balikis and Zyzymena