Fiction Story Ideas - News Events

Current Events Start Great Fictional Stories

© Jennifer Jensen

Story Ideas Start with News Headlines, Adam Balint

Here are some tips to use news stories as starting ideas for your fiction.

Beginning writers often wonder where to get ideas for stories. You can always turn to your own real life happenings (read Fiction Story Ideas: True Stories). But if you want to look further afield for ideas, open your newspaper and check out current events.

Story ideas from headlines

Without reading the full newspaper article, what does the headline make you think of? An apartment fire might make you wonder if it was arson or accidental, someone sleeping with a cigarette or faulty wiring from a landlord’s neglect, if children or elderly needed to be rescued, where they would go now, how it would affect a family financially, etc.

Election results might trigger thoughts about the last big push of the campaign, the giddy feeling of success, how the loser is coping with the news, or how the newly-elected person will help with a particular neighborhood problem.

Create a character who has to deal with one of the problems you've thought of, or use the situation as a complication for a character in a story you’ve already started.

Story ideas from full articles

After reading a news article and getting the full story, let your mind wander and create fiction from it. Pick one or two facts and ask yourself “What if something were different?”

What if the robber actually shot the teller? What if the driver in an accident was your babysitter with your children in the back seat? What if the volunteer couldn’t accept the award because she was helping someone else? What if the terrorist was your son-in-law?

In these questions, the only real news facts are the robbery, the car accident, the volunteer award, and the terrorist. What you do with a beginning fact, and the story it turns into, is up to you.

Create story ideas from questions

The trick to taking a current news event and turning it into a fictional story is to ask deeper questions. Go beyond the examples above and ask yourself:

The more you write, the more you’ll find ideas wherever you look. The trick is to imagine a character, ask questions about what happens (plot) and how people react (character), and then go forward with the story that will be uniquely yours.

For more ideas, read Fiction Story Ideas: Pictures.


The copyright of the article Fiction Story Ideas - News Events in Writing Fiction is owned by Jennifer Jensen. Permission to republish Fiction Story Ideas - News Events must be granted by the author in writing.


Story Ideas Start with News Headlines, Adam Balint
Fiction Ideas Build from Questions, Erich Kasten
     


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