Where do I Begin? A look at starting points for stories with Mini Grey

“Where do you get your ideas?” is a question you getasked a lot on school visits. I suspect AF Harrold has also often been askedthis question, because in The Book of Not Entirely Useful Advice there is anIdeas Shop, where you can buy reasonably priced ideas.

Now the idea of buying a couple of bags of ideas reallyappeals to me. I’ve trawled the backstreets of Oxford and haven’t found theOxford one yet. I'm still looking.

But how do stories get started? When and how did the first whiff of athing that became a book come into being? So my mission in this post is to be a Starting Point Detective, and track down those elusive beginnings.

JK Rowling, when describingher creative process, talks about a Lake and a Shed. There’s a Thing in theLake that hands you stuff that you take to your shed and work on, hammeringaway at it.

“I feel as though the inspiration is thething that lives in the lake that’s very mysterious, that I never see. But it handsme stuff. And then I have to take this unformed stuff – sometimes it can bereasonably formed, sometimes it’s very blobby like molten glass or something,and then I have to take it into the shed and there I have to work on it.”

JK Rowling is working withideas and words, but when you’re a picture-book-maker, you’ve got all thevisual ideas to play with too. My sketchbook is my shed and my collecting place:in the back pages are my shelves and drawers for any scrappy ideas to be stored.In the middle pages is the workshop: when the time is right, a poor blinkingsquinting idea can be brought from the back out into the middle zone and I seeif there’s anything it can become.

Sketchbook back pages in which I scribble down my brilliant idea for some Pirate Nuns... Some treasures from the back of sketchbooks can bething you found or cut out of newspapers.

  A news story about a mysterious smell. Could I do something with this forgotten lunch?

Starting place? Mice vs cats at the British Museum 

Ideas have a habit of evaporating and being lost. The trick is to make sure the ideas don’t fly away – to be a butterfly collector and pin them down, and keep them safely captive until you can bring them into the workshop.

Sometimes catching a starting point means being aStory-Sniffer: following a trail to a story: a scent, a place, a mood. Thismight mean starting with making pictures, with a colour palette, a fox in amoonlight night, someone running through green forest.

But sometimes starting might be a train of thought, a voice-over. Here's a sketchbook page:

I was on a train, I had this idea about magic show bunnies that I was stuck with. Then I started just performing the show, beingthe Announcer, and that gave me just about all the story of the Bad Bunnies'Magic Show.

Asking WHAT IF? (or WHAT COULD?) can be a good starting place. The Adventures of the Dish and the Spoon started with thinking about all the things that a Dish and a Spoon could do together: 

...and in those things were the seeds of a love storyand the danger of being broken. 

Here's the first idea for The Last Wolf on an always-useful post-it note:

Sometimes why not just steal a story? Sometimes you've started with a stolen story without realising it. My book Hermelin, I realised after I'd made it, was really an attempt to remake a favourite childhood book about a cheese-loving proud mouse with a typewriter: Anatole, by Eve Titus and Paul Galdone.


Starting with a badlyremembered story can lead you to new and wonderful places. Jon Klassen's book The Skull began with a folktale in a library in Alaska that Jon read while waiting to do a presentation. He put the book back on the shelf, but afterwards thought about the story, remembered the story, reimagined the story. Eventually he'd remade the story. He contacted the Alaskan Library and tracked down the original tale, and it was wildly and disappointingly different to the story of Otilla and the Skull that he'd made. So a badly remembered thing can lead to a good thing.

A Start can be with an escapedstory; and an ending can become a beginning. The Bad Bunnies that I was pondering about earlier on the train, had actually escaped from a book of poems I'd illustrated by June Crebbin, specifically this poem about a magic show crime scene:

Starting can be with a thing thathappened. Sometimes it's a lost thing: here are a couple of lost things that inspired stories:

Our missing Cat Bonzo for a starting point for Hermelin.

  You wouldn't think it was possible to lose a whale...

So you have a starting point to think about - now you need ingredients for your story, you need to collect things that might happen. One way to collect ideas is to draw. Draw to explore: to go ideas-fishing. Drawing pulls out more ideas like pulling out fish from a dark bottomless lake. Ideas happen while you are drawing, the act of drawing makes ideas happen. I always use the scrappiest paper possible no nothing matters, this does not have to be a good drawing. 

 I thought I’d try and map out all the things I’m interestedin and like drawing and like thinking about, so if I ever need a starting pointI can pick one from my Starting Points Mind Map, and take it to the workshop and see what happens.So here it is:

My Starting PointsDirectory Mind Map

It's on my wall for whenever I might need a startingpoint. Maybe I could randomly choose two things off it and see what happenswhen I put them together - I actually put a Combination Machine in the bottomright corner for just this purpose...

So now it's definitely time to end this post about starting points. I wish you much happy ideas-fishing in your own personal lake -  or whatever or wherever your ideas come from.

 

 


 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 02, 2025 22:00
No comments have been added yet.