Brainstorming Children's Book Ideas
Posted: Monday, June 19, 2006
by Steve Barancik
Best Children's Books - Find, Read or Write
When I speak to writers' groups and writers' classes, the questions I hear most often are about writer's block and how I come up with my ideas.
I'm a screenwriter, but ever since a little girl came into my life, my heart for writing has been in children's books.
If children are part of your life, you have a boundless source for children's book material, even if you don't realize it.
Do you have one? Good. Now think about what concerns you about that behavior. Sure, the behavior is annoying. But think about how it might play out negatively for your child rather than you.
For instance: let's say your child insists on sleeping in your bed and not his own room. You might worry that such immature behavior will result in your child's friends thinking him a baby. They might stop coming over.
You don't want your child to lose his friends, do you? Neither does your child!
Doesn't this sound like subject matter for a book? You already have a major character facing a high-stakes dilemma that your reader (a child) can easily identify with!
Now take the negative outcome you imagined and plot BACKWARDS to the behavior.
For instance:
Check out my page, How To Write A Children's Book, if you'd like more detailed instructions. Better yet, visit my 44 Ways to Fracture a Fairy Tale for brainstorming fresh new ideas inspired by familiar fairy tales.
Steve Barancik is a screenwriter with a passion for children's books. His website, Best Children's Books - Find, Read or Write, is geared both to parents and to children's book writers.
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