http://www.writers-online.co.uk APRIL 2020^29
w r it ing
N
ational Pet
Day is coming
up in April. If
you are a pet
owner, it’s a reminder to check
your pet’s health care is up to date, with
vaccinations and so on, to clear out any toys
that are no longer safe, update collar tags if you
have changed your address and make sure your
home is pet friendly. For anyone who doesn’t
have a pet, it’s a good time to think about
other people – family, friends or neighbours
- who may need help looking after their pets
due to travel plans, old age or illness.
For free-range writers, National Pet Day
provides a great theme to explore in different
genres with this month’s writing workouts. The
only rule is stick to the timings. Short, timed
pieces mean you have to get stuck straight in,
before your inner critic has a chance to interfere.
Memoir
Start with a list of pets, your own or other
people’s, from any period in your life. For me,
that would include my grandmother’s elderly
scottish terrier, Scottie, then Patch, the puppy
my father brought home in his coat pocket,
my best friend’s dog, my children’s house
rabbits and Sabre, the unfriendly rottweiler
that once lived next door.
Choose one. What did it look like? What
noises did it make? What did it smell like?
What did it feel like to touch or hold? Use
all your senses and make some notes. Add
some thoughts about its personality, and
how you related to it emotionally.
Next, jot down some anecdotes from this
animal’s life – any funny, touching, exciting or
worrying moments that come to mind. Choose
one and tell the story. Take fifteen minutes.
Memoir tip: Using all your senses is a
key to more fully remembering the past.
Fiction
Pets can feel like family members, or really
important friends. This story will be about
someone who either gains a pet or loses one,
which can both be life-changing events. In
my book Finding Fizz, a little girl who is
being bullied at school finds an orphaned
puppy, and having someone even smaller
and more vulnerable than she is helps her
feel stronger and the teasing less important.
In my young adult novel Drift, the death of
the dog is the first crack in the protagonist’s
sense of family as a safe and loving place.
In your story, who gains or loses a pet?
Write a character sketch – name and age,
physical description, likes and dislikes,
situation. Make some notes about the pet as
well – what kind of animal it is, its name,
age and temperament.
What is your main character’s life like
before they gain or lose their pet? That’s
the beginning. How do they find or lose it?
That’s the action. In what way is their life
different afterwards? That’s the ending.
Write the story. Take twenty minutes.
Non-fiction
Write a picture book text for young children
about how to look after a pet. Most picture
books are about thirty pages long, with a
sentence or two of writing on each page, and
part of the task is to make an artwork note
where information can be conveyed in the
illustration rather than spelt out in the text.
The easiest subject to choose is a pet you
have looked after yourself – for me, that might
be rabbits, rats or hens. Then you won’t need
to do any research. What sort of
housing does this animal need?
What food? And health care? How
can you look after its emotional needs?
Take ten minutes for a quick first draft,
to get the content. Then take another ten
to check the language, making sure it’s
pitched at a level that young children can
understand, with no long sentences. You can
include some words that may be unfamiliar,
such as ‘hutch’ or ‘dog basket’ if the picture
shows the reader what they mean.
Tip: Writing for different readerships such
as very young children is good practice for
making you really think about your reader,
what they will understand and be interested
to know.
Poetry
In this poem, the narrator is either a pet
owner talking about their pet or a pet talking
about its owner.
Get some background first by imagining
both the person and the pet, their names,
ages and personalities; their physical
attributes and how they feel about living
with each other. Write some notes.
Which one feels more interesting to you,
the owner or the animal? That will be your
narrator. Especially if you are choosing the
animal, you might consider making your
poem rhyme for comic effect but keep it
free verse if that feels more natural. Take 15
minutes. Remember to give your poem a title.
Poetry tip: Because poems feel
personal, we often assume they represent
the poet’s own experiences, thoughts and
feelings. Writing poems from a fictional
point of view helps loosen up the way we
engage as readers.
FREE
RANGE
Animal
spirit
Animal
spirit
ip:
B
Think about connections
with the animals that
live with us in
Jenny Alexander’s
pet-themed creative
writing exercises