100 Prompts for Science Fiction Writers
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From Jules Verne and H.G. Wells to Isaac Asimov, Ray Bradbury, Ursula LeGuin, and William Gibson, science fiction is one of the most enduring and popular genres. Whether on the page or on TV and film (Dr. Who, the Star Trek franchise), it grips the imagination. For a science-fiction author, the dream is to go boldly where no one has gone before, but sometimes the writing seems to be going nowhere at all—and future, alternate, parallel, or speculative worlds just wont come into focus. Fortunately, this guide helps show the way, with 100 prompts for everything from alien invasions to cyberpunk and beyond.
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100 Prompts for Science Fiction Writers - Jarod K. Anderson
INTRODUCTION
Science Fiction (SF), like many of its characters, tends to be born in a laboratory. It also tends to live right on the edge of human knowledge and understanding. The idea for a SF story often grows out of a scientific principle, a strange application of technology, a new discovery, or a gap in our knowledge about the universe. SF, however bizarre, is anchored to our reality, its laws, and its consequences. It is often considered a sibling to Fantasy, as both have elements of the fantastical and unbelievable, but SF is very much its own, unique genre.
All SF has some fantastic elements: rocket ships, unearthly diseases, giant fighting robots, etc. What differentiates SF from Fantasy is that Fantasy’s unusual elements are born of imagination. There is no need for dragons, magic, and unicorns to have any tangible connection to the real world.
On the other hand, SF’s fantastical elements are built upon a premise of reality. Regardless of whether a SF story explores the ramifications of a new technology or describes the first contact between aliens and humanity, the plot typically wears an air of plausibility. This connection to reality gives SF its punch. Couching the unlikely within the solidly real gives SF the power of what if,
making the impossible seem, well, possible.
These prompts, carefully grown and tended in our labs before being set loose on an unsuspecting world, are a first step. They are a laboratory door left slightly ajar, an invitation into possible worlds. However, the best SF has the same building blocks as all great literature: an immersive, engaging story and strong, well-developed, empathetic characters. Although flying cars or a supercomputer bent on world domination might be at the center of your story, the thing that makes us remember it, and love it, is the emotional connection between the reader and the characters who populate your strange world. For that reason, we tried to focus many of the questions that are paired with the prompts on a character, rather than the larger world or context. What does your character want? What is he willing to do to achieve it? What challenges does he face? Whom or what does he care about?
Subgenres within Science Fiction are tricky, and there are, no doubt, many alternative systems of categorization to the one presented in this book. The subgenre tags we employed here have been selected because they are consistently represented in SF publishing. In other words, these are the tropes and themes that helped build SF and that show up again and again. The prompts in this book have been sorted into seven categories: The Pulp, Interstellar, Biological, Aftermath, Futurescapes, Tech, and Another Time. These subgenres are not meant to be restrictive, and, indeed, many of the prompts presented in this book fit into more than