10 Best General Short Story Ideas
10 Best General Short
Story Ideas
Our first
batch of plot ideas are for any kind of story, whether a spy thriller or a
memoir of your personal life story. Here are the best story ideas:
1.
Tell
the story of a scar, whether a physical scar or emotional one. To be a
writer, said Stephen King, “The only requirement is the ability to remember every scar.”
2.
A
group of children discover a dead body. Good writers don’t turn away
from death, which is, after all, the universal
human experience. Instead, they look it directly into its dark face and
describe what they see on the page.
3.
A
young prodigy becomes orphaned. Orphans are uniquely vulnerable, and
as such, they have the most potential for growth.
4.
A
middle-aged woman discovers a ghost. What do Edgar Allen Poe, Ron
Weasley, King Saul from the Bible, Odysseus, and Ebenezer Scrooge have in
common? They all encountered ghosts!
5.
A
woman who is deeply in love is crushed when her fiancé breaks up with
her. “In life every ending is just a new beginning,” says Dakota Fanning’s
character in Uptown Girls.
6.
A
talented young man’s deepest fear is holding his life back. Your
character’s biggest fear is your story’s secret weapon. Don’t run from it,
write about it.
7.
A
poor young boy or girl comes into an unexpected fortune. Not all
fortunes are good. Sometimes discovering a fortune will destroy your life.
8.
A
shy, young woman unexpectedly bumps into her soulmate (literally bumps
into him). In film, this is called the “meet cute,” when the hero
bumps into the heroine in the coffee shop or the department store or the
hallway, knocking her books to the floor, and forcing them into conversation.
9.
A
long journey is interrupted by a disaster. Who hasn’t been longing to get to a
destination only to be delayed by something unexpected? This is the plot
of Gravity, The Odyssey, and
even Lord of the Rings.
10.
A
young couple run into the path of a psychopath. Monsters,
whether people who do monstrous things or scaly beasts or a monster of a
natural disaster, reveal what’s really inside a person. Let your character fall
into the path of a monster and see how they handle themselves.
Now
that you have an idea, learn exactly what to do with it. Check out my new book The Write Structure which
helps writers take their ideas and write books readers love. Click to check out The Write
Structure here.
More Short Story
Ideas Based on Genre
Need
more ideas? Here are ideas based on whichever literary genre you write.
Use them as character inspiration, to start your own story, or borrow pieces to
generate your own ideas. The only rule is, have fun writing!
By the way, for more story writing tips for
each these plot types, check out our full guide to the 10
types of stories here.
10 Thriller Story
Ideas
A
thriller is any story that “thrills” the reader—i.e., gets adrenaline pumping,
the heart racing, and the emotions piqued.
Thrillers
come in all shapes and forms, dipping freely into other genres. In other words,
expect the unexpected!
Here
are a few of my favorite thriller story
ideas:
Rosa
Rivera-Ortiz is an up-and-coming lawyer in a San Diego firm. Held back by her
ethnicity and her gender, she works twice as hard as her colleagues, and she’s
as surprised as anyone when she’s requested specifically for a high-profile
case. Bron Welty, an A-list actor and action star, has been arrested for the
murder of his live-in housekeeper. The cop heading the case is older,
ex-military, a veteran of more than one war, and an occasional sufferer of
PTSD. Rosa’s hired to defend the movie star; and it seems like an easy win
until she uncovers some secrets that not only make her believe her client is
guilty, but may be one of the worst serial killers in the past two
decades… and he knows she found out.
It’s
the Cold War. Sergei, a double-agent for the CIA working in Berlin, is about to
retire when he’s given one final mission: he’s been asked to “defect” to the
USSR to help find and assassinate a suspected double-agent for the Kremlin.
Sergei is highly trusted, and he’s given to understand that this mission is
need-to-know only between him and very few superior officers. But as he falls
deeper into the folds of the Iron Curtain, he begins to suspect that his
superior officer might just be the mole, and the mark Sergei’s been sent
to kill is on the cusp of exposing the leak.
It
is 1800. A lighthouse on a barren cliff in Canada. Two lighthouse keepers,
German immigrants, are alone for the winter and effectively cut off from the
rest of the world until the ice thaws. Both Wilhelm and Matthias are settled in
for the long haul with warm clothes, canned goods, and matches a-plenty. Then
Wilhelm starts hearing voices. His personal belongings disappear from where
he’d placed them, only to reappear in strange spots—like the catwalk, or
dangling beneath the spiral stair knotted in brown twine. Matthias begs
innocence. Little by little, Wilhelm grows convinced that Matthias is trying to
convince him (Wilhelm) to kill himself. Is the insanity real, or is this really
Matthias’ doing? And if it is real, what will he do to defend himself? There
are so many months until the thaw.
20 Mystery Story
Ideas
Enjoy
a good whodunit? Then you’ll love these mystery story ideas.
Here
are a few of my favorites:
Ever
hear the phrase, “It is not who fired the shot but who paid for the bullet?”
This is a philosophy Tomoe Gozen lives by. Brave and clever, Tomoe follows
clues until she learns who ordered the murder: Emperor Antoku himself. But why
would the emperor of Japan want to kill a lowly soldier?
Mystery
writer Dan Rodriguez takes the subway every day. Every day, nothing happens. He
wears earbuds and a hoodie; he’s ignored, and he ignores. Then one evening, on
his way home from a stressful meeting with his publisher, Dan is startled out
of his funk when a frantic Middle-Eastern man knocks him over at a dead run,
then races up the stairs—pursued by several other thugs. The Middle-Eastern man
is shot; and Dan discovers a mysterious package in the front pocket of his
hoodie. What’s inside, and what does he need to do to survive the answer?
A
headless corpse is found in a freshly-dug grave in Arkansas. The local police
chief, Arley Socket, has never had to deal with more than missing gas cans and
treed cats. His exploration of this weird murder digs up a mystery older than
the 100-year-old town of Jericho that harkens all the way back to a European
blood-feud.
20 Romance Story
Ideas
Ready
to write a love story? Or perhaps you want to create a subplot with
a secondary character? We’ve got ideas for you!
Hint: When
it comes to romance, a sense of humor is always a good idea. Have fun! Here are
a few of my favorite love story ideas:
She’s
a cop. He’s the owner of a jewelry store. A sudden rash of break-ins brings her
to his store over and over and over again, until it becomes obvious that he
might be tripping the alarm on purpose—just to see her. That’s illegal—but
she’s kind of falling for him, too. Write the moment she realizes she has to do
something about this crazy illicit courtship.
Colorado
Animal Rescue has never been more challenging than after that zoo caught on
fire. Sally Cougar (no jokes on the name, or she’ll kill you) tracks down three
missing tiger cubs, only to find they’ve been adopted by millionaire Bryce
Champion. Thanks to an antiquated law on the books, he legally has the right to
keep them. It’s going to take everything Sally has to get those tiger cubs
back.
He’s
a museum curator with a fetish for perfection. No one’s ever gotten close to
him; how could they? They’re never as perfect as the portraits, the sculptures,
the art that never changes. Then one day, an intern is hired on—a young, messy,
disorganized intern, whose hair and desk are in a constant state of disarray.
The curator is going half-mad with this walking embodiment of chaos; so why
can’t the he stand the thought of the intern leaving at the end of their
assistantship?
20 Sci-Fi Story Ideas
From
the minimum-wage-earning, ancient-artifact-hunting time traveller to the
space-exploring, sentient dinosaurs, these sci-fi writing prompts will get you
set loose your inner nerd.
Here
are a few of my favorite sci-fi ideas:
In
a future society, neural implants translate music into physical pleasure, and
earphones (“jacking in”) are now the drug of choice. Write either from the
perspective of a music addict, OR the Sonforce agent (sonance + enforcer) who
has the job of cracking down.
It’s
the year 5000. Our planet was wrecked in the great Crisis of 3500, and
remaining human civilization survives only in a half dozen giant domed cities.
There are two unbreakable rules: strict adherence to Life Quality (recycling
doesn’t even begin to cover these laws), and a complete ban on reproduction
(only the “worthy” are permitted to create new humans). Write from the
perspective of a young woman who just discovered she’s been chosen to reproduce—but
she has no interest in being a mother.
So
yeah, ancient Egypt really was “all that” after all, and the pyramids turn out
to be fully functional spaceships (the limestone was to preserve the
electronics hidden inside). Write from the perspective of the tourist exploring
the ancient society who accidentally turns one on.
20 Fantasy Story
Ideas
Need
a dose of sword-in-the-stone, hero and/or heroine packed coming-of-age glory?
We love fantasy stories!
Here
are a few of my favorite fantasy story ideas:
Bored
teenaged wizards throwing a graduation celebration.
Uncomfortable
wedding preparation between a magic wielding family tree and those
more on the Muggle side of things.
A
fairy prince who decides to abandon his responsibilities to become a street
musician.
Just
try to not have fun writing (or even just reading!) these fantasy writing
prompts.
Top 10 story ideas... just for you!
Want a
story idea right away? No problem! Here are our top ten favorite story ideas
for you to use:
·
A group of villains go on a team-building retreat.
·
You are granted one wish. But you have to use the wish for
someone else.
·
Instead of trying to get a man on the moon, every nation raced
to be the first at the very bottom of the ocean.
·
Money really does grow on trees and is heavily regulated by
governments.
·
A plane takes off with 81 passengers. It lands with 82.
·
You are home alone watching TV. A character dials a number on
their phone. Your phone rings.
·
You open a fortune cookie at a Chinese restaurant. Inside is a
handwritten note.
·
A magician, a troll, and a college student walk into a bar.
·
It is the year 3000. The sun starts to flicker.
·
An optimist becomes a pessimist. Why?
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