Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byErin Rosalyn Flynn Modified over 9 years ago
1
Writing Scary Stories: Overview Benjamin Way Creative Writing 5-16-14
2
Topics Choosing a topic Building suspense & atmosphere Keeping them scared
3
Choosing a Topic Two options: Real Life Much more limited in what can happen Much scarier to people who aren’t superstitious Super Natural Much more room for imagination Much scarier for people who accept it as possible
4
Choosing a Topic Whether real or super natural, base your story on something people are already afraid of, then tell a story to make it even worse. What are some things people are afraid of?
5
Things people are afraid of: Dark, unused rooms (attic, cellar) Spiders Strange noises Non-living things with eyes Unexpected strangers Dead stuff (corpses, ghosts, etc.) Elevators Witchcraft Monsters
6
Situations people are afraid of: Being alone Being in charge of others Walking in the dark Investigating something unknown Catching horrible, unknown diseases Meeting new people Losing somebody they love Disappearing mysteriously
7
Making a scary story: Combine some of the things people are afraid of with a situation people are afraid of, and you have created a scary story. Ex. Dark, unused room + unknown noises + dead things + spiders = scary story
8
Building Suspense and Atmosphere Scary stories should be short enough to be remembered completely and told to an audience. Therefore, they need to be fairly simple.
9
Building Suspense and Atmosphere All stories need a conflict. These stories will have simple conflicts, but they must have them. Typically, you’ll pick a stereotypical conflict that requires little to no explanation beyond one sentence. Ex. “A young man was trying to prove his bravery to his friends.” “A young woman moved to a new town and was trying to fit in.”
10
Building Suspense and Atmosphere Give the audience time and space to imagine something bad happening before it does. A good rule of thumb is for the “scary” thing to happen on the third try of a repeated theme. Ex. A person hears a strange noise, and the first two times they don’t find anything, but the noise gets louder, so they check again…
11
Building Suspense and Atmosphere Don’t tell the audience the specific details of what horrible thing happens at the end. Let them imagine it themselves. They’ll come up with something much worse (to them) than you ever could.
12
Keeping them Scared The best scary stories are the ones that make people frightened all the time for at least a week. To do this, put details in the story that will remind them of it on a daily basis.
13
Keeping them Scared Examples: An odd sound in the laundry machine A creaky door Turning on the light in a bedroom Something behind the shower curtain Something sneaks up on them while vacuuming Phone ringing in another room
14
Review Whether supernatural or realistic, choose a topic that includes an element of danger for the protagonist. To make it scary, combine situations people already are afraid of with things people are afraid of. Keep the story fairly simple, so it can easily be remembered in full. The audience’s imagination is key to creating fear. Give them time to imagine how things will go wrong, and don’t provide all the gory details. To keep them scared for a long time, lead up to the scary part with details they’re likely to encounter on a normal day.
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.