How to find story ideas in real life with Harlan Coben | Meet Your Maestro | BBC Maestro
By BBC Maestro
Summary
Topics Covered
- Idea Trumps Character
- Fuse Elements Together
- Ask 'What If'
- Combine Ideas Mashup
Full Transcript
There's three things that make a writer.
Inspiration uh perspiration and desperation. We'll get to all three, but
desperation. We'll get to all three, but I'm very excited to talk about inspiration because every other author kind of likes to ignore this. Every
other author claims that he hates the question, where do you get your ideas?
Like, there's a boutique in the village that sells them. But the truth is that the idea is everything. Everyone always
says it's a character or plot. Character
versus plot. And most of the people that will teach you will tell you it's character. They're wrong. It's not
character. They're wrong. It's not
character. It's plot. We'll go into it in a second. But character is plot. Plot
is character. If I say to you, I have a great book or I have a great TV show I want you to watch. The first question you ask me is not who's the lead character. What's their background? No,
character. What's their background? No,
you want to know what the story is about. That's the idea. So, let's face
about. That's the idea. So, let's face that one. You have to come up with a
that one. You have to come up with a really good idea. You could pretend otherwise. You can start talking about,
otherwise. You can start talking about, oh, I have this really interesting character. If he's just going to stare
character. If he's just going to stare at his neighbor for the whole book, nobody cares. You have to put him
nobody cares. You have to put him through something interesting. Again,
I'm being a little facicious here.
They're equally important. Character and
plot. But what I'm going to try to get you to do is to think of them together.
Character plot dialogue research rewriting, all of these things have to bleed into one another. They have to blend. I will talk about one during
blend. I will talk about one during another because the idea is you keep being taught that they're separate. Oh,
now I'm going to work on my character.
Now I'm going to work on my story. Now
I'm going to work on my setting. No,
that's going to throw you off. Don't do
that. It's all one thing. So, let's get down to basics. How have I come up with certain ideas? And how can that help you
certain ideas? And how can that help you come up with ideas in your own life? I'm
going to show you four different ways that we can come up with ideas that can we can turn into novels or screenplays.
Ideas come from several different places. I think mostly again it's
places. I think mostly again it's keeping your mind wide open. There are
these little hooks in your brain and everything that goes through just goes through and every once in a while something gets stuck on that. I write
that down quickly. A lot of them get stuck. I will have pages and pages
stuck. I will have pages and pages especially when I'm trying to think of a book idea. It usually takes me about
book idea. It usually takes me about three months. A lot of those ideas will
three months. A lot of those ideas will never come to fruition. I have saved them all and I read them all before I come up with a new book. Because often
times, as we'll discuss later, you will take three or four or five different ideas and meld them and mold them together. So, where do these ideas come
together. So, where do these ideas come from? They normally come right from my
from? They normally come right from my personal life. That's place one. I'll
personal life. That's place one. I'll
give you a couple very specific examples. I wrote a book a number of
examples. I wrote a book a number of years ago called Hold Tight. I was out to dinner with friends of mine and they confessed to me that they were having
issues with their teenage son and so they put um spyw wear on his computer so they could fi figure out what he's doing all day. And I'm thinking, of course,
all day. And I'm thinking, of course, well, what if what if I put spyware on my kid's computer and I got back a message that changed my life and now the
kid disappears. I'm like, whoa, this is
kid disappears. I'm like, whoa, this is really cool. And what a cool topic to
really cool. And what a cool topic to explore. So, this became the little seed
explore. So, this became the little seed that eventually grew into Hold Tight.
Hold tight. It's about Adam and Tia.
They put Spyrunner's 16-year-old son's computer because his best friend recently committed suicide. A very
cryptic message comes in, their son vanishes, and they have to figure out what to do. So, that's an idea of what I'm talking about. Another book I wrote called Promise Me. I overheard some
teenagers who I love and adore were down in the basement of my house and I overheard them talking about drinking and driving. And I said, "Promise me."
and driving. And I said, "Promise me."
Which was the title of the book. You
won't do that. Here's my phone number. I
don't care if it's 3:00 in the morning.
I don't care what you're on. I'll come
pick you up. I won't tell your parents.
Just promise me you won't get in a car with someone who's been drinking driving. Maybe some of you have made a
driving. Maybe some of you have made a similar promise. So, that's the end of
similar promise. So, that's the end of the story. Nothing else happened. They
the story. Nothing else happened. They
never actually called me. But fiction
writing, what you're doing is asking, "What if? What if a teenage girl calls
"What if? What if a teenage girl calls my hero? What if he goes into New York
my hero? What if he goes into New York City and he picks her up at 3:00 in the morning and she tells him to drop him off at a house, drops him off at the house, and the next day, no one at the
house even knows who she is and no one has seen her?" What if? That's how
Promise Me came about. Each book is something like that. Another book that I wrote a couple years ago is called The Boy from the Woods. So, this is anything can get you an idea. This is what I
mean. Keep your mind open. I was on a
mean. Keep your mind open. I was on a hike with my family. I hate hiking. I
don't get it. I know we're all supposed to be into hiking now. I find it really boring. I'm like, "Oh, there's a tree
boring. I'm like, "Oh, there's a tree and there's another tree. Bring me to the city where I can look at, let me go through a bookstore. Let me browse through a bookstore. Let me shop window shop. Let me see people's faces." All of
shop. Let me see people's faces." All of that stuff. Yeah, I love all that. But
that stuff. Yeah, I love all that. But
the woods, I'm so bored. It's hot.
There's mosquitoes. There's bugs. And
I'm walking like this. And I'm ranting the way I'm ranting at you finding at you find now. And my family is rolling their eyes. And then I see on a parallel
their eyes. And then I see on a parallel path. It's a boy about five or six years
path. It's a boy about five or six years old walking completely by himself. And I
start to think, well, what if what if that boy came out of the woods right now and said, I've always lived in the woods. I've known no other life before
woods. I've known no other life before that. I don't remember parents. I don't
that. I don't remember parents. I don't
know how I ever got there. I break into cabins to feed myself or I find some food on, you know, in in the plants and I've been this way my whole life. And
what if now 30 years pass and he still doesn't know how he ended up in those woods and now he gets a clue as to what really happened back there. That's
another way I've thought of a book idea.
So even when I'm most my my most miserable, you can come up with book ideas. So sometimes the ideas come from
ideas. So sometimes the ideas come from your personal life and observations and sometimes they come from what you read or what's going on the news and things like that. So for example, I wrote a
like that. So for example, I wrote a book a few years ago called The Stranger. And the way I started a
Stranger. And the way I started a stranger was I'd read an article about a woman who had faked her pregnancy by going to a website called something like fake pregnancy.com or whatever and
getting a fake belly. And I'm like, "Wow, that's weird. What can I do with that?" So, I came up with this idea
that?" So, I came up with this idea where a stranger, as the book opens and as the TV series, if you saw it on Netflix, opens, a woman comes up to our hero and says, "You know, your wife is
never pregnant. She just faked it. She
never pregnant. She just faked it. She
got a fake belly. She got a fake sonogram. She got it all online and she
sonogram. She got it all online and she just pretended." And I started to think
just pretended." And I started to think about the fact that we have all of these secrets online, don't we? Suppose this
stranger were dropping these kind of bombshells on everybody's life. somebody
else finds out that they were cheating, somebody else did, you know, revenge porn, whatever it is, they kept doing different things and the stranger is dropping these bombs on people's life
and how it's now going to affect them.
So, that's an example of where you're just getting it from articles that you're reading or real life. Another
case was I was really interested in all these DNA genealogy sites that are popping up all over the world and how they're changing, but how can I do something slightly different? So I took
in a book called Runaway, I took a a girl who was missing who had discovered unfortunately had got involved in drugs and find out something really shocking about herself on these DNA sites. All
the things that we see, I don't use cutting edge technology. I'm not a big researcher. All the things that you see
researcher. All the things that you see in my books are everyday things. This is
the way of the world. If you're going on a date with somebody now, you Google their name. If you didn't, that's
their name. If you didn't, that's unrealistic. It would be like writing a
unrealistic. It would be like writing a book in the 1970s and not having a telephone. These are the things that we
telephone. These are the things that we kind of exist and work with. So when
you're seeing these things in the world, how can you take some of these new technologies and turn them into story?
The third way I come up with ideas is I think of an image or a sentence or a word even and I challenge myself to find a story out of it. My book No Second Chance, the opening line is when the
first bullet hit my chest, I thought of my daughter. I thought of the sentence.
my daughter. I thought of the sentence.
I just like, "Wow, this is really cool.
Why? Why am I thinking of my daughter?
Where is my daughter? Who shot me?" And
I started to tell the story right from out word. I didn't even think of the
out word. I didn't even think of the rest of the story yet. I just went from that. When the first bullet hit my
that. When the first bullet hit my chest, I thought of my daughter. In the
book called The Woods, he's out in the woods and he just sees his father. The
first line is, "I see my father with that shovel and he's crying." just had this image in my head of my father out in the woods digging and crying. Wow,
what kind of story can I make out of that? Why is he crying? What's he doing
that? Why is he crying? What's he doing out there? It starts off almost like a
out there? It starts off almost like a reading task or a writing task that I'm going to give you. But instead, I want you to actually use that to start developing a book. Maybe that will become your book. Maybe it won't. It'll
be good for you either way. But try to start with something just that image right away. We're already in a story. If
right away. We're already in a story. If
I'm starting a book with the line, when the first bullet hits my chest, I thought of my daughter. We're in the story, right? We're already there. So,
story, right? We're already there. So,
that's another way I've come up with an idea. And the last way, and probably the
idea. And the last way, and probably the most useful and the most important way, is that I combine ideas. I combine a bunch of things together. It's never
really just one thing. I'm going to try to tell you how I came up with the idea for a book called Tell No One. And I
think that's probably the best example of how it works because again, I'm making this seem a little simpler than it is. On the one hand, coming up with
it is. On the one hand, coming up with some of these thoughts is simple, but really it's trying to put it together because an idea is not a novel. An idea
is not a full screenplay or a TV series.
It's the seed. So, the first part of Tell No One was, I was watching a really crummy romance movie on TV. And this is what I mean by anything can stimulate an idea. I'm watching a really bad romance
idea. I'm watching a really bad romance movie on TV. And it's one of those we've seen a million times where the wife dies in the beginning and the man can't go on with his life and then a hot actress walks by and all of a sudden he's fine.
Have you noticed that in these movies?
So I asked myself in those moments I get serious. What about the man who can't go
serious. What about the man who can't go on? What about the man who's truly lost
on? What about the man who's truly lost his soulmate? Is there some way I can
his soulmate? Is there some way I can find joy and redemption for this guy?
Now take this part of the idea and I have it over here. And the second part of the idea, and this is also what I mean about memoir, loss, your real life
coming into play to inspire your work. I
lost my parents at a fairly young age.
They were both dead by the time they were my age. I miss them greatly. They
never got to see their grandchildren.
And one day I'm on the computer and I'm thinking about that the same way we all do. Wouldn't it be great if my parents
do. Wouldn't it be great if my parents could have met their grandchildren?
Wouldn't it be great if they were still around? And I'm looking at one of those
around? And I'm looking at one of those street cams and I think to myself, what would I do right now if my parents walked by on this street cam? Then I
took these two ideas and I mashed them together. A man and a woman are happily
together. A man and a woman are happily married. Eight years pass. He can't get
married. Eight years pass. He can't get over death of his wife. He gets an email. He clicks a hyperlink. He sees a
email. He clicks a hyperlink. He sees a webcam. And his dead wife walks by. And
webcam. And his dead wife walks by. And
the little Homer Simpson part of my brain goes, "Woohoo!" That's it. Now
again, I make this sound like this is 15 minutes of work. This is three months, my friends. This is three months of
my friends. This is three months of sitting on the couch trying to convince myself that I actually have a job and that I'm working. But this is how you sort of start taking ideas, taking
what's actually happened to you, taking those emotions and feelings, fiction is memoir, memoir is fiction, and putting them together in order to start coming
up with some ideas. So now you have some of the specifics and some of the ideas, it's time for you to start coming up with a few of your own. Just think about your own life. Think about the most traumatic thing that's happened to you.
Combine it with something that's not so extraordinary. It's interesting about
extraordinary. It's interesting about fiction and and what I try to do is I actually want it to be the most placid pool where even just dropping a pebble in it can cause ripples. If I'm dropping
a pebble in an ocean, it's a little more difficult, which is why I like to place my a lot of my books in suburban a lot where everything seems kind of calm and normal. So now I want you to do it. I'm
normal. So now I want you to do it. I'm
not saying you have to come up with the idea for your book, but it might end up being the idea for your book. It might
end up being an idea that leads to a character or a section of your book. I
don't want it to just be a writing exercise that you just throw away. So,
come up with something like we just talked about, some way of in your personal life, in something you've read, in combining ideas, come up with
something that we can then start our novel or our screenplay with.
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