Monday, January 10, 2011

Results! Where do you get your leeches?

Leeches are everywhere! On the beach, in your canary, sharing your dreams…

Leeches?

Last week I shared this quote: "When you're a writer, the question people always ask you is, "Where do you get your ideas?" Writers hate this question. It's like asking Humphrey Bogart in The African Queen, "Where do you get your leeches?" You don't get ideas. Ideas get you." — Connie Willis


Then I asked you to bring out your leeches or to share a “Williscism.” Here's our results and thank you for sharing these brilliant leeches!

Caroline Clemmons said...
Connie's correct--ideas get me. I can't stop them buzzing around in my head. LOL No wonder I often get headaches.

Mark Adair said...
I have 2 leech origin answers.
The first one I share freely in interviews: One night after many stressful days developing software I couldn't wind down. So I grabbed my laptop and headed to bed, I sat there staring at the screen for 20 minutes or so. The next thing I know this guy pops into my head…bright, introverted, and sensitive, tormented by a past that he didn’t orchestrate and a future he couldn’t control. His name was John Truman. I sort of followed him around for a few weeks. Through him I met Paul, and then Susan, the love of his life. One day it came to me, the source of John’s struggle, why he grew into the person I had come to know. He was part of the New Dawn, a secret, Oxford-based society; he just didn’t know it yet. (The Father's Child).

The second answer I've never divulged until now: I keep an ancient story-teller in the basement. Whenever I need a new idea, I trade him 2 episodes of The Office. He just can't get enough of Michael Scott.

j. a. kazimer said: (in response to: Where in the world do you get those (crazy) ideas?) ~ "The voices, of course." I tilt my head and frown. "Shhh!!! Did you hear that?"

Cara Lopez Lee said...
My Mexican-Chinese grandmother has been doling out her family history to me in bits and pieces for my entire life - a story that leads back to South China and Old El Paso, revolutions and bootlegging, despotic community leaders & smuggled immigrants, rapists and child brides. These fascinating little leeches have been sucking the life out of me for years, so I've had to start turning them into my first novel, or I'll never be able to move on to the second one in peace - another leech waiting in line.

Patricia Stoltey said...
I know I'm not eligible to win since I'm a contributor, but I had to share that I had my second big story idea from a dream just last week. However, I don't want to dwell on the fact that leeches creep up on me when I'm sleeping.

Paul Hansen said...
My leech "bit" while walking on a beach in CA. It kept nipping for 8 yrs before I finally started writing a trilogy on ET-human interaction. 3 MSS later it's still biting! The leech? "DO YOU REALLY WANT TO LEARN TO FLY (a UFO)?" (I'm a long time pilot.) Who could resist?

Beth Groundwater said...
My answer to the "Where do you get your ideas?" question is "They sneak up on me and say BOO!" I'm a firm believer in the power of the unconscious brain to work on problem-solving and idea-generation while you sleep, and most of my good ideas appear in the morning. So my first advice to those pursuing the creative arts is to get lots of sleep!

Marian Allen said...
My leeches appear out of the unlikeliest places. One came from a photograph of Salvador Dali and his entourage. One came from a Victorian poem. One came from Star Trek. One came from asking my Facebook friends what I should write about. The answers were: "donkeys versus zombies", "the lost colony of Roanoke" and "last night I dreamed a canary ate a dog". I enjoyed that one.

Mary Ricksen said...
If I am lucky they bite me!Never know when, where, or why, they just jump up and bite my brain. These are brain leeches. A special variety, they go in through any available opening and head straight for the brain. their bite releases chemicals in the brain that make me hallucinate stories. So there you go. Luckily I decided to write down my hallucinations and that's how I get my ideas... Happy New Year and many leeches in the future!

Karen Albright Lin said…
My novels have been inspired by true family experiences, work in a crisis center, a successful short story I wrote. Screenplays inspired by: my son's experience with the paranormal, Janet's tale above, a magazine article about the Three Gorges Dam, a dream, a radio talk show's guest, and a friend's description of menopause, a producer's need for a script for Cameron Diaz and Jim Carrey, a common saying, a fascinating tradition in China I discovered while there.

Shannon Baker said...
My "leeches" are three perfectly lovely ladies. When I told them of an interesting article I'd read, one looked at me and said, "When are you going to write that book?" It became my first published novel. I recently sat down with these same 3 leeches for a two-day retreat and voila! they inspired yet another plot. Thanks, leeches, you know who you are!

Steven said...
I clone my own leeches in a lab I set up in my basement. Five years ago I started with one African Fire Leech (known by its distinctive red markings), but since then I've managed to incorporated genetic material from a number of compatible species. I pay for this activity by selling some of my crop to neighborhood kids (mostly boys, of course) to be used as pets or in practical jokes.

N. R. Williams said...
LOL Janet. My ideas spring upon me at the most inopportune moments making me appear to be a dizzy blonde. Blonde I am, but dizzy? How's that, I included both?

Clarissa Draper said...
Here's where I get my ideas:
(a) dreams
(b) while watching movies (I always think I could make the story better)
(c) talking to myself (I always start my conversations with myself with "What if...")

Jan Morrison said...
The truth? Often my leeches come to me when I overhear bits of conversations. They get me thinking what if? and then I'm off. One was when I heard an artist I know at an art gallery opening saying that she used to be a rock walker at Peggy's Cove, reminding folks to stay away from the treacherous edges of the rocks and that it gave her time out in the beautiful area to plan paintings. My novel The Rock Walker was born in that moment! Another was because my ex-husband suffered a brain injury a few years ago (long after we were apart) and it got me wondering what it would be like to be in a relationship with a man who had a different mind than he'd had when we'd married. True was created. If someone asks me that question though I answer 'Oh, I pay an idea service to mail them to me - I get one idea a week in the mail - it's great! Want their number?' That usually does the trick.

P.L. Parker said...
I love ancient history and I watch the Discovery Channel frequently. Ideas for two of my books came from that source and then as I'm relaxing in the bathtub, the ideas start to fly.

RhondaWriter said...
My favorite leeches: grade-school children who attend my writing classes! Their thoughts and ideas are fresh and fun and I learn from them every time!
I've taught over 6,000 children in groups of 30 to 300 (most with special needs). Some of the delightful little leeches that I taught back in 2004 are still hanging on - many now with stories of their very own!

After great gnashing of teeth on a tasty appetizer of escargot by our satiated panel of judges, today’s blue-ribbon leech, and the winner of a DVD of The African Queen, is… Cara Lopez Lee!

Janet Fogg
Please follow our Chiseled in Rock blog!

1 comment:

Patricia Stoltey said...

What a great list of leechy answers. Congratulations, Cara!