Follow that Writing Trail!


We all know the story of Hansel and Gretel, right? No? Well, basically this is a well-known German fairy tale originally published by the Brothers Grimm in 1812. When a young brother and sister, Hansel and Gretel, wander into the woods, they take a slice of bread and leave a trail of crumbs to follow home. Brilliant idea, however, the birds eat the crumbs, and they are lost in the woods. We'll leave the story at that point.

Recently, I spent time following crumbs left by other writers. Thankfully they weren't eaten by the birds. (The crumbs that is, not the writers--they're fine.) The crumbs I followed were actually links tucked into posts on blogs and even in comments. 

This leads me to the question, How often do you follow links (URLs) in articles?

Certainly, if you followed all the links in some articles, you would never reach the end. I make it a practice to always read the complete piece, then if a link interests me, I go back and follow it. Even then, I am careful to right click and "open link in new window". That way I don't lose the referring article until I know I'm finished with it.

The post I was reading was on the this Writers on the Move blog and was titled, Why Write a Memoir? Wait! Remember what I said? Read to the end before following those links! The writer, Heidi M. Thomas, speaks about how to capture short snippets of life. I opened the comment section to add a response and read the other comments. A fellow writer, Mary Jo Guglielmo, had this to say, "I like doing short memoirs or Flash memoirs." And she added a link. 

Hmm. Flash memoirs? I read to the end of the comments and added my own. Then I returned to Mary Jo's comment and followed her link. This took me to a guest post on the same blog by yet another writer, Jane Hertenstein. In the second paragraph, Jane wrote,  "Six Minute Magazine is looking for quality fiction that can be read in under six minutes." And she gave a link.

I finished reading then returned to that URL. I'd never heard of the Six Minute Magazine. It sounded fun. I had a look around their landing page, and then spotted an invitation to "visit our partner website, FLASH FICTION FORUMS." And you've guessed it. Another link!

Intrigued, I right clicked on that one too, and it took me to a series of forums. I was about to close the window when I spotted a topic that caught my attention: Word Games: Got a word game? Have a short writing game? Share it here with members of the site!

This sounded intriguing, so off I went to a page full of fun-sounding games. I noticed the topic Three Word Story had 7 pages of comments. 

How could you write a story in three words? I decided to investigate. This link took me to a post that introduced a new idea like this -- Each poster copy/pastes the previous post then adds three new words to develop the story. The writer then gave the command, "Start!" and then the words, As he was . . .

Those were the initial three words of the story. I glanced ahead and saw the next seven pages were loaded with a gradually unfolding story. What fun! Time to stop following links. I had work to do.

I opened my mail program and commenced an email to my on-line writers group for South African Christian Writers. I explained how the exercise worked and then issued the command, "Start!" I gave them the words, "The elephant lowered . . . " and hit send. I can't wait to see how it turns out. Should be fun. 

This got me thinking. How often do we miss some real treasures because we don't follow the trails laid down for us by other writers? Now I'm not for one second suggesting we click on every link, but maybe we need to glance back at the article when we finish reading it, and see if there are any trails worth investigating. After all, if you're not a South African Christian Writer, you probably don't want to follow those crumbs. But sometimes following an almost hidden path could lead to some fascinating on-line destination.

Just don't forget to right click and open in a new tab or window so you can find your way home, otherwise the birds might get there first, and you could be lost on-line. Forever. 

Let's have some fun. Click on comments, copy/paste the previous comment, and progress the sentence by a further three words.

Start!  
 The sun is . . . 

 Other posts about writing exercises: 

Wanted: One Writing Buddy

SHIRLEY CORDER  lives a short walk from the seaside in Port Elizabeth, South Africa, with her husband Rob. She is author of Strength Renewed: Meditations for your Journey through Breast Cancer. Shirley is also contributing author to ten other books and has published hundreds of devotions and articles internationally. 

Visit Shirley on her website to inspire and encourage writers, or on Rise and Soar, her website for encouraging those on the cancer journey. 

Follow her on Twitter or "like" her Author's page on Facebook, and provided you leave a link, she'may even follow you back.

10 comments:

Debbie A Byrne said...

Sounds interesting! I check out links too.

Magdalena Ball said...

how to turn writing into a fun game - thanks Shirley. Of course following the links can burn up a lot of time, so have to be careful not to do it too long or it becomes the most pleasurable form of procrastination.

Mary Jo Guglielmo said...

What a fun post Shirley. When the urge seems right, I follow the link. I followed your link to your site and discovered your post about writing a story about a bowl. Many possibilities....

Shirley Corder said...

Thanks for reading ladies. And yes, Magdalena, you're right. It can send you on a crazy wild ride around the Internet. You do have to be sensible.

D. Jean Quarles said...

Fun! Great post.

Joan Y. Edwards said...

Dear Shirley,
Thanks for writing this post. It was fun watching you go from link to link...but not right away...waiting until the end of the article. Fun, fun, fun spin on it.

Karen Cioffi said...

Shirley, what an interesting and fun post. Adding anchor text and hyperlinks to blog posts gives the reader more bang for the buck, but as Maggie points out, as the reader you have to watch the time.

Shirley Corder said...

Thanks ladies.
Yes, you're so right about the time factor. That's one of the reasons I wait until the end, then I can be selective and decide which ones I really want to follow. Otherwise with some posts - like mine - you'd be there all day!

Shirley Corder said...

Follow up on the S.African exercise . . . talk about a challenge! We stuck to the three-word maximum for a couple of weeks but oh wow! It was SO difficult to keep the story on track. Eventually I changed it to one sentence at a time and now it's a lot easier. http://cwosa.blogspot.com/

Shirley Corder said...

Follow up on the S.African exercise . . . talk about a challenge! We stuck to the three-word maximum for a couple of weeks but oh wow! It was SO difficult to keep the story on track. Eventually I changed it to one sentence at a time and now it's a lot easier. http://cwosa.blogspot.com/

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