23 Creative Exercises That Make Me a Better Writer Every Time
Here’s a secret the “just write your novel” crowd doesn’t want you to know: the best athletes in the world don’t only play games. They practice. They drill. They run the same play hundreds of times until it’s second nature.
Writing is no different. Creative writing exercises sharpen your craft in ways that working on your manuscript alone never will. They isolate specific skills — dialogue, description, pacing, voice — and let you practice them in a low-stakes environment where nobody cares if it’s terrible.
Think of these 23 exercises as your writing gym. You don’t have to do them all. You don’t have to do them every day. But when your prose starts feeling flat, your creativity hits a wall, or you just need to warm up before a drafting session, these are your go-to reps.
1. The Six-Word Story
Ernest Hemingway (allegedly) once wrote a complete story in six words: “For sale: baby shoes, never worn.” Your turn. Write a complete story — beginning, middle, emotional gut-punch — in exactly six words.
This exercises compression, implication, and the art of leaving things unsaid. It’s harder than it sounds, and that’s the point.
2. Describe a Room to Reveal Character (Without Describing the Person)
Write a 200-word description of someone’s bedroom, office, or kitchen — without ever describing the person who lives there. Every detail should hint at who they are: their habits, their secrets, their emotional state.
A spotless kitchen with alphabetized spices tells a very different story than a kitchen with three days of dishes and a half-eaten birthday cake still on the counter.
3. Rewrite a Scene From a Different POV
Take a scene from your work-in-progress and rewrite it from a different character’s perspective. The antagonist. A bystander. A pet, if you’re feeling adventurous.
This builds empathy muscles and often reveals layers of your story you didn’t know existed. It’s also an excellent way to beat writer’s block when you’re stuck on a particular scene.
4. Write Dialogue Without Attribution
Two characters are talking. Write one full page of dialogue — no “he said,” no “she whispered,” no action beats. Just the words they say.
Can the reader tell who’s talking? Can they feel the emotion? If yes, your dialogue is strong. If not, your characters need more distinct voices. This is one of the most diagnostic exercises you can do.
5. The Constraint Box
Give yourself three random constraints and write a 500-word scene using all of them. For example: a library, a lost key, and the emotion of regret. Or: a train station, a secret, and the sound of rain.
Constraints force creative problem-solving. The more specific the box, the more inventive your brain becomes to work within it.
6. Flash Fiction Sprint (500 Words, 15 Minutes)
Set a timer. Write a complete story in 500 words. Beginning, conflict, resolution. Fifteen minutes. Go.
This trains pacing, concision, and the ability to start and finish — a skill that many new authors struggle with more than they realize.
7. Write Using Only One Sense
Describe a scene using only sound. Then only smell. Then only touch. No sight allowed.
Most writers over-rely on visual description. This exercise forces you to explore the other senses, producing prose that’s richer, more immersive, and more memorable.
8. Character Interview Deep Dive
Pick a character — yours or a completely invented one — and write a long-form interview with them. Ask them about their childhood, their biggest regret, their most embarrassing moment, what they’d do if they won the lottery.
Let them answer in their own voice. The depth of character knowledge this builds is extraordinary, and it directly improves the authenticity of your fiction.
9. The “And Then What?” Chain
Start with one sentence: “A woman walks into a bookstore.” Then ask “and then what?” Write the next sentence. Ask again. Keep going for 20 iterations.
This exercises cause-and-effect thinking — the engine of plot. Each “and then what?” forces narrative progression and prevents the meandering that kills pacing.
10. Rewrite a Fairy Tale in Modern Setting
Take Cinderella, Red Riding Hood, or Jack and the Beanstalk and set it in the present day. Keep the core structure but reinvent everything else.
This teaches story structure by giving you a framework to work within, while forcing creative reinterpretation. It’s also just really fun.
11. Write the Same Scene Twice — Once Fast, Once Slow
Take a single moment — a character opening a door, for instance — and write it in 50 words (fast pacing) and then in 500 words (slow pacing).
This builds your ability to control pace intentionally. Knowing when to speed up and when to slow down is one of the most important skills in fiction.
12. Eliminate Every Adverb
Take a page of your existing writing and remove every single adverb. Then rewrite the sentences so they don’t need them. “She walked quickly” becomes “She hurried” or “She strode” or “Her heels clicked a frantic rhythm on the tile.”
This strengthens your verb choices and makes your prose more muscular.
13. Write a Scene Where Characters Say the Opposite of What They Mean
Subtext is the soul of great dialogue. Write a scene — a breakup, a job interview, a family dinner — where every character says the opposite of what they actually feel.
The tension between what’s said and what’s meant is where emotional power lives.
14. The Object Monologue
Choose an object — a wedding ring, a baseball glove, a locked diary — and write a 300-word monologue from its perspective. What has it witnessed? What does it know? What is it waiting for?
This exercise stretches your creativity and often produces surprisingly moving or funny results.
15. Write a Fight Scene Without Violence
Two characters are in conflict, but there’s no physical fighting. Write the scene using only dialogue, body language, and environmental detail. Let the tension simmer without ever letting it boil over into action.
This builds your ability to write tension — arguably more important than writing action.
16. Describe a Color to Someone Who’s Never Seen It
How would you describe “red” to a person who has been blind since birth? This exercise forces you to find metaphors, sensory equivalents, and emotional associations that go far beyond the literal.
It’s one of the best exercises for deepening your descriptive prose and expanding your metaphorical thinking.
17. The First Line Generator
Write 20 opening lines for novels that don’t exist. Just first lines. Make each one compelling enough that a reader would want to keep going.
Great opening lines are a distinct skill, and like any skill, they improve with practice. Some of these might even end up as the starting point for your next project.
18. Reverse Outline a Chapter You’ve Already Written
Take a finished chapter and outline it backward — scene by scene, beat by beat. What actually happened? In what order? Does each scene do something essential?
This exercise reveals structural weaknesses, pacing problems, and scenes that don’t earn their place. It’s revision training disguised as an exercise.
19. Write a Scene With No Internal Thought
Write an entire scene using only external action, dialogue, and observable detail. No character thoughts. No internal monologue. Just what a camera would see.
This is the Hemingway approach — surface-level prose that implies deep emotional undercurrents. It’s incredibly hard and incredibly rewarding to practice.
20. Speed Character Creation
Set a timer for 5 minutes. Create a complete character: name, age, occupation, deepest fear, secret desire, one quirk, and one contradiction. Do it three times in a row with three completely different characters.
Speed removes overthinking. The characters you create under pressure are often more interesting than the ones you agonize over for hours.
21. Translate a Song Into a Scene
Pick a song you love. Don’t write the lyrics (please don’t — copyright exists for a reason). Instead, write a prose scene that captures the same emotion, mood, and energy as the song. If the song feels like a rainy drive at 2 AM, write the scene that lives in that feeling.
22. Write Your Character’s Worst Day
Not the worst day in your plot. The worst day in their life — before your story begins. What happened? How did they react? What did it change?
This backstory exercise builds character depth that doesn’t appear on the page but informs everything your character does.
23. Use AI to Generate a Prompt, Then Riff on It
Ask an AI writing tool to give you a random scenario, then write a scene based on it. The beauty of this approach is that the prompt is completely unexpected — it pulls you out of your own creative patterns.
Storyloft’s AI assistant can brainstorm prompts, riff on ideas, and even give feedback on what you produce — making it a creative partner that’s always available when you want to practice.
Make Exercises a Habit
You don’t need to do all 23 of these. Pick two or three that excite you and rotate them into your weekly routine. Even 10 minutes of practice before a drafting session can dramatically improve the quality (and ease) of the writing that follows.
Productive authors treat their craft like athletes treat training — the practice is where the growth happens.
More Writing Skill Builders
- 27 Ways I Find Writing Inspiration When My Creativity Completely Dies
- 19 Funny but Effective Ways to Beat Writer’s Block
- 20 Places I Go (Mentally and Literally) to Find Story Ideas
- 17 Daily Habits of Highly Productive Authors
- 24 Brutally Honest Truths About Writing a Book No One Warned Me About
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