Tag Archives: writing inspiration

Story prompts for short fic January (and maybe February, who knows)

Welcome to 2026! Yes, I know we’re over half way through but family life has been busy so I’m only just getting back into the swing of things now, with a slightly panicked feeling that this month is being swallowed up so fast!

As I think I mentioned in… a previous post somewhere, I’m taking a wee break from the various novel projects over the next few weeks. Partly because January is quite event-heavy so I don’t want to dive into a new project in the midst of all that. Partly also because I’m feeling the well of creative joy is running a little dry and I want to nurture that by letting myself play and explore without pressure for a wee while.

I think there’s a danger for authors of becoming so tied in to the publishing cycle – the need to produce a book a year – that we do not have the space to stop and reassess our own writing. Not in terms of does this particular novel work but am I doing with my craft what I really want to be doing? Am I thinking through my themes and storytelling deeply enough, or am I scratching the surface or treading the same ground because I need to get this book finished by next month? Am I, perhaps, writing to meet the expectations of the publishing industry rather than to challenge and reshape my own expectations of my own writing?

One of my aspirations for my writing is that I get braver – both in terms of the questions I ask, and the way I tell my stories. I’m seeing these next few weeks of short fiction exploration, then, as a way to nurture my confidence, and perhaps find new voices for some of the angers and hopes I’m feeling at the moment. I really want to explore hopeful solarpunk properly, for example, and return to cyclic narratives. At this particular moment in time, watching the news, I want to play with blending spikier, angrier voices into hopefulness too.

One of the joys of short fiction is that you get the reward of finishing something in a short time frame, which can be empowering if the act of creating is feeling a little daunting. Another joy is that it is a much more flexible form than the novel in terms of playing with voice or form or reader expectations, and the stakes for experimenting with your craft are lower. Trying something way out of your comfort zone? If it fails, pftt you’ve lost a day or two, so no big deal. Or trying something wildly unconventional? It’s okay, it doesn’t need to work for 100,000 words, it only needs to work for 500, or 5,000.

I thought I might share with you some simple solarpunky/climate fic prompts I’m going to use, in the hope you might want to join me creating wee stories. Whether you have specific craft aspects you want to explore, or just want to play and see what comes to the page, I hope these prompts will give you some ideas. I will share some snippets of what I produce in a later post, perhaps some whole pieces (although that counts as first publication, so bear that in mind if you share your writing in your own blogs or newsletters).

SO without further ado…

Prompt 1: The dice game

Get a die, roll it three times, once for each column, and ta da! There’s your starting points for a story. See what questions come to mind and what you can build around these seeds. (yes I know a child isn’t an object per se. I was going to change it to a cat (also not an object tbf) and forgot. So consider it a schrodinger’s child/cat)

Prompt 2: Headlines!

From some recent New Scientist articles, pick one of these and keep poking it with a ‘What if?’ stick until you get past the first obvious ideas into something that feels fresh and intriguing. Like – What if a carbon border tax was on people not trade…, yes and now what if we paid in flesh/seeds/labour/lifespan…, yes and now what does that mean for this, and this, and… Just keep chasing that curiosity until something fun sparks.

Prompt 3: Concepts pick and mix!

Pick 2 or 3 of these random ideas, phrases, bits of tech or concepts, mash them together and see whether anything fun emerges from the chaos! If you’re struggling pick a historic era & imagine something from that time period in the future (solarpanel crinolines, anyone?), or a favourite piece of folklore (cat sidh but make it a manifestation in the space orbital), see if that helps something emerge.

Hope these give you some fun inspiration, or perhaps ideas for how to set up your own themed sets of prompts. If I were in a dystopia or dark academia mood, for example, these prompts games could easily be tweaked to feed that kind of story. I might be blending these prompts with other media like oracle cards or rune stone castings to force myself to leap in unexpected directions, so think about doing something like that too. Throw in something you overheard in a cafe, or a sign you saw, or a song lyric, an animal species name (moths, moths have some disproportionately poetic names) – these kinds of non-sequiteur prompts will help break your mind away from lines of thought it’s travelled before, and therefore help you stumble upon exciting new story ideas.

Happy writing and please let me know how you get on!

Thank you as always for your support. Because accessibility in publishing is important to me, I keep all my craft and publishing posts free, so any shares or tips are greatly appreciated. Wishing you a fabulous weekend.

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Mother Sea Island Tour

In the lead up to Mother Sea’s publication I did a wee countdown series of social media posts visiting various islands that inspired the island in Mother Sea. It was mostly an excuse to post lots of photos and rave about lovely places, and I figure I ought to pull it all together here just in case. (In case of what, I don’t know … the fiery death of Twitter? the need to prove ownership of the photos? validation that all my effort pulling it together was worth it? … Probably that last one tbh)

Anyway, below is a slightly expanded-upon tour of the islands behind the island…

One – Iceland

Not much in common with the tropical island in Mother Sea you say? Well, no. But this place has A Lot to teach the writer about colour palettes, I think. The deceptively monochrome black sand and white glaciers and searingly blue sea are an incredible reminder that less can be more! Also in this country there is no escaping the power of an unquiet land & the persistence of folklore.

Fav folklore – The Jólakötturinn – a giant cat that eats folk who weren’t gifted new clothes at Yule

Fav experience – The northern lights. I have no photos but omg, it was all the things and more.

Two – Tierra del Fuego

Staying in higher latitudes but at the other end of the planet, the beauty of these southern islands blew me away. It’s undeniably antarctic in weather and wildlife but all my preconceived notions of that were undone by flower-strewn islands, by hummingbirds & parrots right alongside penguins & sealions. Also, partcularly relevant to Mother Sea, heartbreaking histories of colonial genocide & the loss of language & culture.

Fav folklore – Teiyin from the Yahgan ppl. A shapeshifter god, protector of children & elderly, enforcer of altruism.

Fav experience – Following in Darwin’s footsteps – I read This Ship of Darkness while I was there for extra cross-temporal-bonding! Also, steamer ducks. So round.

Least fav – my 1st ever sunburn. I did not know it *hurt*! What?

Three – Shetland (and Orkney)

Closer to home, Shetland in particular, but also Orkney, taught me that political borders don’t always mean an awful lot. That dialects and folklore follow their own paths across the sea and old trade routes still shape island identity now, regardless of what the maps say. They also taught me that teeny tiny planes are the best, and I’d probably not survive a Shetland winter.

Fav folklore – The Sea Mither (spot the #MotherSea connection!) who wrestles the dangerous Teran to calm the seas.

Fav experience – Standing in the old broch on Mousa, listening to storm petrels purr in the stones around me. And getting dive-bombed by Bonxies on Orkney mainland!

Four – The Mediterranean

Kinda cheating lumping this whole region (and the Canary Islands) into one, but doing each island individually would turn this into a book, and also there are some common strands despite the distinctive feel of each place. I love the Mediterranean garrigue ecozone. It’s so stark & distinctive & surprising. I have a huge soft-spot for cyprus stands and stone pines, and ancient olive groves. But these islands are also fascinating for studying farming’s adaptations to a hard climate, the way humans have shaped the very land & how fragile that balance is. Especially as tourism threatens rural economics, communities, water resources & conservation.

Fav mythology – The Minoan rock tombs on Crete & Lycian cliff tombs in Turkiye appear in Mother Sea. Caves & bats – what’s not to love?

Fav experience – Cretan orchids. Omg, if you’re remotely into flowers, the orchid species crowding the hillsides will give you heart failure.

Five – Seychelles

The right ocean at last! These are the closest islands to my fictitious one in Mother Sea, so a lot of the flora & fauna are similar. Seychelles taught me a hard lesson on coral reef damage & restoration, but a beautiful one on Creole language & culture. It also taught me to look beyond the glossy curated tropical paradise images for the murkier truth about the impossible value:cost trade-off of tourism on places and communities like these.

Fav folklore – An eejit Brit in 1800’s decided the coco de mer was the original forbidden fruit because it looks like a bum! And therefore that the Seychelles was the lost garden of Eden. I mean, it’s a definite paradise in some ways, but also, lol.

Fav experience – Meeting giant tortoises? Or giant fruit bats squabbling in the tree above us as we ate our dinner in the dark (hint: Mother Sea may contain bats)

Six – Madagascar

Along with France & South Asia, this is the other origin of my community in Mother Sea, so hints of Malagasy culture fed into the book. This country is a biologist’s dream and heartbreak all in one – the most mindblowing evolutionary wonders alongside some of the most heart-rending poverty and worst habitat destruction I’ve ever seen. For Mother Sea though it gave me ‘tsingy’ landscape (limestone karst) & baobab forests, pirogues & feminism & day geckoes.

Fav folklore – I was told once that bats hang upside down to show their arse to god as revenge for an offence. I cannot remember what the offence was but I love this so much.

Fav experience – An aye-aye there-&-gone in the dark, indri singing in the dawn, being unutterably lucky.

Seven – The Outer Hebrides

Finally to the place where Mother Sea began – with the history of St. Kilda & it’s abandonment. That tale of population decline, of grief and a terrible communal turning-inward because of that grief was the seed that everything else in Mother Sea grew around. And the islands of North & South Uist, Benbecula, Eriskay and Barra were also there to teach me so much about island communities, the persistence of faith, carving a living from the liminal shore.

Fav folklore – The Blue Men of the Minch. They’re blue, they shout poetry slam challenges at ship captains, they raise storms. I love them.

Fav experience – Just the startling, stunning bays – white sand and turquoise water and the steep, watchful dunes. The ruined silhouettes of churches and manor houses on lonely islets, the ghosts of brochs haunting the lochans.

Thank you for coming with me around the world! There are a couple of dozen more islands I read about, stalked online, talked to people about and dreamed of, that all fed into Mother Sea in other ways. But these are (some of) the ones I’ve lived in and loved, and left pieces of myself behind in.