Tagged: naming

A Ghost By Any Other Name

We thought we were all set with names for our ghost series, until we started watching Supernatural. We’re about a decade and a half late to that particular party, but better late than never, right? The problem is that we were going to have a character named Jensen. And he was going to be peripherally involved with our ghosts. And for those of you who, like us, spent the past 15 years living under a rock, one of the stars of Supernatural is named Jensen Ackles.

Nothing against Mr Ackles or the character he plays. They’re both quite handsome, and we’re definitely enjoying the show. The issue is that our Jensen wasn’t going to be much like Dean Winchester. But with an uncommon name and a similar occupation, we were concerned that readers would immediately picture Dean/Jensen. We didn’t want to fight against that. It would be like having an archeologist in your novel and naming him Harrison. Everyone would expect him to wear a fedora and fight nazis.

So our Jensen has a new name now. And we’re mostly used to calling him by it. Jen is tickled by the idea of naming a dude character after herself, so Jensen is filed away, waiting patiently for a different story world. One in which he will be free to be himself without a bunch of preconceptions.

A writing partner is someone to enjoy old TV shows with, and brainstorm new names for your characters as an indirect result.

A Cast of Millions

Last week we updated the cast list for our chain story, Tune in Next Time, with new information about our unnamed protagonist, and entries for the new members of his family that we’ve encountered. This week we’re rounding out the long, long list of his friends and enemies. It’s often hard to tell whether someone is a friend or foe, or both. This cheat sheet probably won’t make that much clearer. Sorry. Such is the nature of this story.

New Friends and Enemies:

  • Esmerelda: UnderDuchess of Svenborgia.  Sister of Cleopatra. Married to our protagonist’s brother Jim. According to Jack (protagonist’s father), she demands unblinking eye contact during a fingerbang. She stopped wearing red after “the incident” – but will make an exception for passing messages using the washerwoman’s code. Wanted our protagonist to dissuade his father from wasting so much money on prostitutes. Has mastered spoken morse code. Last seen engaging in group sex with Jack, Cleopatra, and Darlene in a black velvet room in an unnamed country.
  • Cleopatra: Sister of Esmerelda. UnderDuchess of Svenborgia, or possibly an UnderDuchess once removed – it’s so hard to remember all the rules. Sometimes passes herself as a bartender nicknamed Isaac, and has some fire eating skills, but whether she’s really a member of the Guild of Fire Eaters is unknown. Has a messenger-goose named Gordon. She wears a prosthetic butt over her real butt, per old Svenborgian tradition. Used sex to recruit our hero to her cause, which turned out to involve his father so he bailed. Last seen engaged in group sex with Jack, Esmerelda, and Darlene in a black velvet room in an unnamed country.
  • Viscount Arlo of Svenborgia: everyone is in agreement – this guy is such a dick. Being Svenborgian royalty, he’s probably related to Esmerelda and Cleopatra. He is bald, and wears an eye patch, and his genitals are apparently fantastically gilded and filagreed. He had a relationship with our protagonist’s mother sometime in the past, and is currently sleeping with Fleur (who is rumored to have hired a fitness coach for him because he chunked up recently). Had a magnificent white crystalline lair until Tessa blew it up. Last seen berating his henchmen for only bringing him our protagonist and not Jason as well, then being incapacitated by Tessa.
  • Jenkins: a dark-skinned, dark-eyed, and deadly woman. Is quick enough to take out ninjas. She’s always been vixenish, ill-tempered, and impulsive. She’s in league with Svetlana and Heinrich in a scheme with an undefined goal. Dropped the Tessa-Bot off the roof, thinking it was the real Tessa, and was not happy when she discovered the substitution. Last seen unconscious from electrocution on the street in Valentine Village.
  • Joan: another Academy alum. Currently employed at Valentine Village, where she dresses as Aphrodite. An expert in the use of weaponized cosmetics. Last seen in her dressing room at Valentine Village.
  • Setsuko: a rogue mime whom our protagonist has had a crush on forever. She is an Asian woman with green hair and the same unicorn tattoo on her butt as Tessa. She was educated in English and Swiss boarding schools, as well as the Academy, which makes her tongue action during licking codes very crisp and meticulous. She has pretty feet and unexceptional ankles, and is perhaps not exactly female. Last seen in an alley in Valentine Village, naked.
  • Dr Absinthia Belladonna: former headmistress of the Academy, where she murdered her predecessor to get the position. Turned to rocket surgery after leaving education, and was in the process of developing an amazing new technique for using rockets to operate on people instead of operating on rockets. Last seen dead by her own surgical rockets in her underground apartment/laboratory in Harmonia.
  • Hipster Jane: has been involved in the music business forever, first as half of Jane and Able, then in promotions after Able disappeared under suspicious circumstances. Also taught Suspicious Circumstances 101 at the Academy. Dresses like a cheap 70s streetwalker. Smokes. Has red hair and a foot fetish. Last seen heading into the Academy’s root cellar with a barefoot John.
  • Betsy Murgatroid: attended a rival Academy. Developed “darts of insanity” that make everything feel and smell exactly like fried chicken. Her partner is Fernando. Uses insect noises as flirtation and enjoys convoluted role playing during sex. Is on a quest to collect some of the “exotic compound” in our protagonist’s semen. Last seen in the subbasement below the Academy’s root cellar, failing at the last possible second to get a sample of that exotic compound.
  • Fernando Heavens: Betsy’s partner. He has a nose like a snail shell and a chin like the toe of a boot. Is married to a woman who seems disapproving of his dangerous profession. Likes to use his walkie-talkie in unnecessary circumstances. Has an odd affection for ferret leather shoes. Last seen in the subbasement under the Academy’s root cellar, stymied in his attempt to give chase by a tangle of debris.
  • Darlene: an Asian woman with a cough who spends time with our protagonist’s father Jack. Probably a prostitute. Probably involved in Jack’s bid to regain power. Last seen engaging in group sex with Jack, Esmerelda, and Cleopatra in a black velvet room in an unnamed country.
  • Taylor, Tara, Tanya: sisters of Tessa and Tallulah. They are younger than Tallulah, and follow her orders to a T, which implies that they are evil. All four of them have a master whom they obey. Last seen along with Tallulah entering Jason’s lair upstairs from Dr Absinthia Belladonna’s apartment/laboratory.
  • Tesla: yet another sister of Tessa’s, with whom she used to pair up against the rest of the brood. She has fair skin and red hair, and spent some time married and living in France but that ended poorly. She vanished when her marriage fell apart, but resurfaced (as it were) aboard the submarine at the Academy’s secret submarine dock. Last seen setting the vessel in motion.
  • Nathaniel: we haven’t met Nathaniel yet, but he sounds dangerous. He lived with Tallulah at one point. He has four brothers, all mortal enemies of Tessa.
  • Aimeloxym: Myxolemia’s identical cousin, also with metal stud eyelashes. Got her training at the same ranch in the high desert as Freya. Was posing as a mermaid at the Contrarian National Aquarium to pass along secret messages using a bubble code. Is pretty vicious with a harpoon gun. Last seen unconscious outside the aquarium.
  • Hildegard: John’s ex-wife, except she calls him Maurice. She wears a red coat and gloves, and a tinsel boa. Last seen fleeing the Rainbow Connection train in Harmonia after trying to strangle Uncle Jinx.
  • Yoda: a dumpy person in a Yoda mask, true identity unknown. Gave our protagonist a coded message and a pair of Crocs. Last seen sleeping in a dumpster full of scorched bikinis behind a strip club in Harmonia.
  • Gordon: a messenger goose belonging to Cleopatra. Delivered a Tibetan candy bar as part of the confectioner’s code. Last seen at Cleopatra’s apartment.
  • The Professor: mentioned in passing after he was kidnapped by squirrels.
  • The Professor’s Girlfriend: unnamed woman with one leg. Last seen making out with Jim in Dr Absinthia Belladonna’s underground apartment/laboratory in Harmonia.
  • Great Hammer: a retired professional wrester and sometime lover of Thor. He’s probably the one who betrayed Jack. Has a fatal weakness for soup, which will make it easy for Thor to poison him if they ever meet again.
  • The Donut Man: has a transplanted hand that does not match the rest of his complexion. Enjoys making people eat donuts at gunpoint. Uses a licking code to pass messages. Seems to know Tessa. Last seen on the crowded streets of Valentine Village.
  • Transylvania Homicide Detective Regis St Oink Oink: a famous Harmonious cartoon.

Organizations:

  • The Academy:  official name – The Hopscotch Academy. Seemingly located somewhere in Europe, this elite, private academic institution educates young people in the arts of spycraft and espionage. It boasts a secret submarine dock, and a root cellar with a subbasement. The Academy’s students wear scarlet uniforms; skirts for the girls, kilts for the boys, unless they are wearing wetsuits. Extracurriculars include the Ninja Defense League and rugby. The chess team is called the Anacondas. There has never been a prom. There are several rival schools, and their competitions can be deadly. Many obscure kinds of codes are taught, and training exercises can be both x-rated and grueling. Former staff includes Headmistress Dr Absinthia Belladonna, and Hipster Jane. Alumni include our protagonist and his numerous siblings, Tessa and her sisters, John, Joan, and Setsuko.
  • Pirates: the literal, seafaring variety. Little is known about them except that they have a powerful union, and women are grossly underrepresented among their ranks. They seem to be falling on hard times, which perhaps explains their willingness to form the Pirate-Ninja alliance. The two pirates we’ve met are Captain Jorgensen and Aphrodite Hunter. Jorgensen captains a three-masted frigate, but due to his insolvency flies a cellphone ad in place of the Jolly Roger, and his ship is crewed by cheap mime labor.
  • Ninjas: due to their near total silence, they have incredibly sensitive ears. Like pirates, ninjas lose all honor when they’re angry. Also like pirates, they have a strong union and a dearth of female members. Sometimes ninjas go feral. Ninja camouflage is the best camouflage, and when it falters it’s usually because they want it to. They sometimes treat themselves with contact hallucinogens, so be careful about engaging in hand-to-hand combat with any that are visible because it’s probably a trap. There are several factions of ninjas, including NSFW, the Ninja Society or Furtive Warfare (one of the mercenary dojos) and Ninja-Vision, an especially dangerous and deadly faction that have a giant hollow television on wheels as their mobile HQ. Michiko is the daughter of Ninja-Vision’s leader. If he’s not actually a ninja, Heinrich is heavily involved with them. Tessa has deep yet mysterious connections to the ninjas.
  • The Pirate-Ninja Alliance: this unlikely alliance is in its infancy, and there is distrust on both sides. At least one faction is in formation in the Sea of Imbroglio, off the South Dakota coast on the orders of Aunt Züg posing as Mother. Jason is involved with a ninja-pirate splinter cell, and Aphrodite has an ambition to rule the alliance.
  • Mimes: the best known mime cartel is the White Faces. They are so far-reaching that Venezuela is part of their territory. They once held Tessa captive. One of their spies infiltrated the ninjas, but that didn’t go well for him. When their missions require them to speak, it is called “walking against the wind.” Setsuko was once the world’s most celebrated mime, but she has gone rogue.
  • Pinkie Swears: a mysterious organization, the high-ranking members of which tattoo their pinkies fluorescent colors. They all have terrible halitosis. Jason may have been inducted as a member. Cleopatra was tending bar at his tattooing ceremony.
  • The Guild of Fire Eaters: Little is known about them except that they lay claim to Jemma, being the youngest female in our protagonist’s family. She has tattoos marking their claim. Cleopatra has fire eating skills, but it’s unknown whether she’s a member of the Guild.
  • Vegetable Militants: also known as vegerebels and vegan separatists. They wear vegetable masks and use blowguns. They call Thor the Hamburger Heathen and are strongly opposed to his Presidential Decree of Universal Carnivorousness.
  • Valentine Village: located in Harmonia. When it was owned by Uncle Jinx it was a Christmas-themed amusement park named TinselTown. Upon Jinx’s assumed death it was inherited by our protagonist. By the time he visits it has been rebranded as Valentine Village and is, obviously, love-themed. And sex-themed. Can’t forget the sex. It is staffed by people in Cupid and Aphrodite costumes. Everything is pink and lavender and frilly. There is a donut shop that sells Scorpion Angel Cremes, which have hallucinogenic properties. There are bachelor auctions and raffles. A network of tunnels sprawling beneath the park retains its Christmassy color scheme. Some tunnels are full of tinsel, but you can still see signs of the wild fishermen who lived in the region years ago.

Countries:

  • Contraria: the home country of our protagonist’s wife, Fleur. It is ruled by warlords, of which her father is the main one. The capital is Funkistan, but their sanitation is woeful, so the royal hospital is in Pittsburghistan. The warlords of Contraria are heavily into calligraphy. And rituals. So many rituals. They also have a prophesy for every occasion.
  • Harmonia: Contraria’s ancient enemy,  the country next door. The capital is Fore-Apart, which is where you can catch the train called the Rainbow Connection. It will take you to Barbershoppe, home of Valentine Village. The country is full of happy, contented people. Their nasty reputation seems to be entirely Contrarian propaganda.
  • Svenborgia: our story has not taken us to Svenborgia yet, but members of its royal family have made appearances. Viscount Arlo, and UnderDuchesses Esmerelda and Cleopatra. They are tangled up in many plots involving the protagonist’s family and events in Contraria.

A Cast of Thousands

It’s been quite a while since we updated the Dramatis Personae for our ongoing chain story. Let’s remedy that, shall we?

Due to the sprawling nature of the chain story, this update turned out to be quite the project. We had to read the whole thing, and take notes in between bouts of laughter. In order to get something up today, we’re going to start with the new information about our unnamed protagonist and his family. Next week we’ll have the entries for all of his new friends and enemies, as well as an introduction to the various nefarious organizations that inhabit his weird and overcomplicated world.

New facts about our protagonist:

His name is five syllables long, but we still don’t know what it is. As per family tradition, he was born at the North Pole. He learned everything he knows about stealth during his time as a stowaway on a tramp steamer in the South China Sea. Unlike his twin, he can sleep anywhere. He has blue-gray eyes and a super hairy chest. There is a tattoo hidden under his chest hair, given to him by Tessa. It contains, of course, a hidden message. While at the Academy he learned how to control the minds of others through an odd vocal technique he calls “hypnotoading,” and also how to break through most hypnotic trances. He is not English. He refers to his intuition as “The Ladies.”

His family:

Our hero’s family owns an inflatable woman factory, and it is rumored that all the men in the family have a certain exotic compound in their semen.

  • Jim: Our protagonist’s younger brother, and the only twinless sibling in the family. He is a triplet, along with Jemima and Jemma. He has a southern drawl, small feet, and lots of theories about twins. Like most of the family he has a grudge against Mother. He claims to never use sex as a distraction while using sex as a distraction. Last seen in Dr Absinthia Belladonna’s subterranean apartment/laboratory, making out with the Professor’s unnamed girlfriend. Once worked in a bank with Kelly, the love of Jason’s life, and slept with her. Has a wife named Esmerelda.
  • Jemima: One of the triplets. Wears a dashing green and blue cardigan. Is currently drugged by Jim and under his control. Last seen locked in Dr Absinthia Belladonna’s bedroom with Jemma.
  • Jemma: One of the triplets. As the youngest female in the family she is promised to the Guild of Fire Eaters, and has the tattoos on her spine and ribcage to prove it. Wears a dashing green and blue cardigan. Is currently drugged by Jim and under his control. Last seen locked in Dr Absinthia Belladonna’s bedroom with Jemima.
  • Jack: Turns out our hero’s father isn’t dead after all. He’s mixed up with the Contrarians in a bid to either become President of the United States (of Australia), or found his own rogue nation. Whatever his plans, he’s blowing through his whole treasury to pay for prostitutes. Jack spent his youth in the rural lava fields of Iceland. He has never been convicted of anything, or even charged, but many people call him The Devil. At one point in time he dated his ex-girlfriend’s sister, daughter, and niece at the same time. His faked death involved being run over by a backhoe. He signals his cohorts through the use of a linen pocket square because he is allergic to silk. Wants the protagonist’s help to defeat John and Tessa, but is refused. Last seen engaged in group sex with Esmerelda, Cleopatra, and Darlene in a black velvet room in an unnamed country.

A Character By Any Other Name

It’s been more than a year since we’ve outlined a new book, which means it’s been more than a year since Jen’s had a chance to name a whole bunch of characters. Sure, incidental naming opportunities arise during the writing, but it’s just not the same, you know? Sometimes even Kent is allowed to name one-off characters, even if he tends to name them all Cheryl/Sheryl for vague and mysterious reasons.

With Jen this whole naming thing is a sickness. We aren’t having any more kids, and most of our household tools and appliances already have names. So what’s a girl to do?

If that girl is Jen, she keeps a running list of appealing names so that when it finally is time to spec out a new cast, she’s prepared.

But she also gets really excited each time March rolls around and the Name of the Year competition gets underway. For those of you who are unfamiliar, NOTY is the most amazing March Madness style bracket out there. They spend the year collecting outrageous and fantastic names from around the world and pit them against each other, letting the public vote. The public doesn’t always get it right, unfortunately. I mean, can you believe that last year’s final wasn’t between Dick Tips and Sweet Orefice? Or that, if the winner had to be one of the Pope names, that Pope McCorkle III beat out Taco Pope? I’ll say it again: Taco Pope.

Anyway, this year’s competition is well underway, and already some great names have fallen. But many truly astonishing ones remain. Go check it out!

The sorts of names that end up in the NOTY brackets, amazing though they are, are not really the sorts of names we want for our characters. But each time the voting opens up for a new round, Kent and Jen scurry to their computers and cast their ballots. And then they discuss their votes. A good deal of the time they agree on which name is truly superior, but when they disagree it’s because Kent is wrong. He has a sweet tooth for rhyming names and terrible puns, and seeing evidence of his terrible terrible taste reassures us that we’ve made the right choice in letting Jen be the primary namer in our writing team.

Places, Everyone!

r-avatarOur first three novels are set in the same made-up town, which is strongly inspired by a real place. The music novel and (son-of) are set in New York City, which despite what you may have heard is an actual, real place. For the science novel and its successors we have once again invented cities, and the locations that inhabit them.

The science novel’s locale is practically part of the cast. We never considered setting the story in a known city. When it came time to plan its sequels, though, we worked very hard at tracking down a real place that could work. Neither of us can quite say why. Given the logistical constraints of the plot, as well as some crucial geographic and climate considerations, it was proving all but impossible to choose an existing location. Plus, we wanted it to have a cool name.

The desire to name the place was probably the signal that snapped us out of it. So, today we concocted a deliciously Russian appellation for the place where we’ll be making more characters’ lives miserable, and decided where to put its map pin. In this case, “we” means Jen of course, because names are her superpower. Now that we’ve chosen this route, it’s dawned on us how strange it would have been to have books in a series follow different theories of setting and world-building.

As an added bonus, creating a location from scratch allows Kent to stretch his D&D muscles to draw up maps.

The Name Game

r-avatarOn any team, different players have different strengths. In the case of Rune Skelley, one of Jen’s main strengths is naming — things, people, places, you name it (but not if she sees it first). This is good because Kent tends to be less than awesome at coming up with names.

This doesn’t prevent him from having opinions, though. So, once in a while, Jen will deliver a name that just doesn’t work for Kent. And it does matter if both writing partners aren’t on the same page about a name. After all, characters’ names are perhaps the most important things about them. No other aspect gets such heavy use, or is called on to signify everything else the reader knows in such a compact, almost invisible way.

These name-disagreement situations are uncommon, but we’re in the midst of one right now. They’re terribly awkward. There’s a sense of “Jen is the one who’s good at this, so she wins,” which we both know isn’t a solution. Kent is at a disadvantage to produce viable alternatives, so he feels stuck. We really don’t have a formal process for coping with them, other than trying to keep communications open and give each other time to adjust. So far it’s never led to arson.

Partnership is about trust and compromise. Working with the right partner, compromise can be a creative exercise.

Felicity and Smedley 4evah!

r-avatarAs we mentioned previously, we recently spent a few days sprucing up the blog. While reading through all of the Monday and Wednesday posts where we share our bizarro microfiction writing prompts, we learned something uncomfortable about ourselves. Namely, that we favor a certain breed of names. They tend to be old-fashioned and a bit snooty, at least to our ears. Felicity is used most often, by both Jen and Kent. Is it the same Felicity each time? That seems unlikely, and it’s probably safer to say no. If it was always the same Felicity, that would probably nudge Jen back toward the quagmire of trying to concoct one epic plot that could encompass everything. That way madness lies.

No, it’s better to not impose order, even if it means living in a world populated with many a Felicity, Winifred, and Gertrude, and their boyfriends, Smedley, Archibald, and Reginald.

We also have a penchant for saddling couples with matching names: Emilio and Emily, Phil and Felicia, Felix and Felicity.

Regular readers of the Skelleyverse will know that Jen is almost entirely in charge of naming the characters in our novels. In light of that, it was interesting to see proof that, when winging it, she makes choices just as questionable as Kent’s.

By Any Other Name

Recently we talked about naming the setting for our new novel, but we haven’t talked much about naming characters. Up until we mentioned it, you probably didn’t even realize that characters should have names, right?

Obviously you know that your characters need good names, and that the names need to fit the genre you’re writing in. Instead of harping on that, or trying to explain what makes a good character name, we’re going to talk about how we come to an agreement on names for our characters.

In a nutshell, Jen does it. Kent has, shall we say, questionable taste in names. He’s usually happy to just pull a name out of the air and saddle some poor character with it forever. Jen, as we’ve mentioned before, loves backstory in every form, and will happily sit for hours poring over baby name books and websites in search of a name with the right feel for the new character. She gets to name the characters because she cares more.

That’s not to say that Jen has absolute authority over character names. Kent has veto power (usually), and even makes the occasional suggestion. Once she’s done making faces and explaining why his suggestion is wrong, Jen pats Kent on the head, rolls up her sleeves, and gets to work.

There are times when a character is presented to Kent with a complete name attached. More often, Jen will create a list of potential name combinations and together we will discuss pros and cons. For this new work, Sam was on the table as a possibility, but it turns out that pretty much whatever surname you put with that, Kent thinks it sounds like a noir detective. Since none of our characters are noir detectives, that ruled Sam out.

This process is another way to make sure you and your writing partner have the same image of a character. If one of you wants to name the heroine Felicity Fairchild and the other thinks she ought to be called Jinx, there’s a fundamental disconnect that needs to be rectified before you jump into composition. Iron out these bugs before you start and you’ll save yourselves a lot of headaches come editing time.

If neither you nor your partner have the naming bug, you could say that whoever creates the character, or writes their debut scene, gets the honor (or chore) of naming them. What method do you and your writing partner use?

What’s in a name?

We’re trying to come up with a name for the city where our story takes place.

The novel before this one is set in Manhattan, so there was very little naming of places required. The neighborhoods and streets all have names already, and there are myriad restaurants, boutiques, businesses, and landmarks to call on for flavor. That’s not to say that we didn’t have to make anything up. We invented a few locations to suit our purposes and then we had to name them.

This time, though, we’re back to founding our own city, which gives us the fun honor (or dreaded chore, you decide) of naming absolutely everything.

Naming is a special art, whether it’s characters or places or the story itself. Not everyone has the gift for it. In our case, Jen definitely has the touch. So in our workaday partnership activities, naming stuff is one of her primary duties. (Kent has other talents. Honest.)

But for whatever reason, in this case we’re teaming up on the toponym issue. Jen named the whole cast already, so maybe she was just tuckered out. It’s neat to kick ideas back and forth and watch how your partner reacts. It’s a good way to tell if you’re on the same page in regards to the flavor. If one of you wants to call the place Kitten Basket* while the other favors Death River*, there’s a disconnect somewhere and it’s better to get that sorted out early on. One of the beneficial side-effects to our collaboration and brainstorming has been that the place’s history is starting to take shape, because some of the name concepts are so evocative. But we still haven’t chosen a name!

*Not actually under consideration. Feel free to use it yourself.

We Finally Reached

  • by jensat around the dwellings
  • Are you still left-handed?
  • a desperate plea for sanity
  • ten mile hike with a full backpack
  • I became too feeble to move
  • which inspired the nickname
  • my fake damn bladder
  • if the plane crash hadn’t killed him
  • going into the lawn care business
  • that patch of New Mexico soil

We finally reached that patch of New Mexico soil we’d heard so much about. After the ten mile hike with a full backpack we endured to reach this place, I became too feeble to move, and so sat around the dwellings with the others. Our immobility was in response to a desperate plea for sanity from our overtaxed muscles. Conversation centered around Bob’s plan for going into the lawn care business, until he looked at me and abruptly asked, “Are you still left-handed?

I responded in the affirmative which inspired the nickname Lefty. Bob was never known for his creativity.

At that point my fake damn bladder started acting up and I cursed the day I’d ever met Bob’s brother Lou. This was all his fault. If the plane crash hadn’t killed him, I would have done it myself by now.

about stichomancy writing prompts

try our stichomancy writing prompt generator!