A Writing Prompt Inspired Someone to Share a Heartwarming Story About the Cost of Lies

To be the best writer you can be, you must write every day. That writing is like exercise, and even if you don’t feel like doing it, you must if you want to be any good. That one day, you will look at your scribbles and snippets and a story will emerge, like a goddess from a block of marble on which you’ve begun to chisel.

Or something.

If you’re one of those that thinks practice makes perfect (which is usually how it works), daily writing prompts are an excellent way to get your exercise in.

This is how a compelling story about lies started–with a writing prompt on Reddit.

Writing Prompt with all the feels

Someone came up with an opening and it was good.

Photo Credit: Imgur

The narration sucks you in…

Photo Credit: Imgur

The characterization leads us neatly to the central personage and his problems.

Photo Credit: Imgur

Both characters were fleshed out and complex…

Photo Credit: Imgur

As were the conflicts facing them.

Photo Credit: Imgur

The story chugged up a hill of suspenseful set-up.

Photo Credit: Imgur

Then rammed us in the stomach.

Photo Credit: Imgur

Leaving us breathless and wondering about the scars in the people around us, both visible and invisible.

Because behind every scar, there’s a story.

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The Mountain From “Game Of Thrones” Has a Wife, and Their Size Difference is Adorable

Meet Thor Björnsson!

 

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He’s the 6′ 9″ 425 lbs behemoth who plays The Mountain on ‘Game of Thrones’.

He lives by some simple rules…

1. I haven’t skipped a meal in 10 years.
2. I never miss a workout.
3. I never miss my 6-8 hours of sleep every night.
4. I never stay up late.
5. I never drink alcohol.

AND he’s got a wife!

According to her Insta, she’s 5’2″ and weighs 116 pounds.

You know what’s coming next… because the title told you…

She could literally fit inside of him…

So how does he fit… nevermind…

 

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Pretty fly! I’m a lucky guy 😎

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They work out at the same gym. His gym mostly.

Unless they’re on the road…

And he can probably do this for an hour at a time…

 

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Dope shot!! Check out how relaxed Kelsey is!! This is what I call, complete trust 100%!! @kelc33 . @platinumheritage

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And with two hands… two hours at a time…

There’s a lot of these…

So many….

His head is as big as the camel’s and her head is as big as the camel’s nose…

Okay, I think that’s probably enough.

No, one more…

Turnabout is fair play!

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19 Police Sketches of Famous Book Characters Compared to How They Look in Movies

Authors spend a lot of time crafting character descriptions so you can quickly paint a picture and get a sense of what their personalities are like. For many, these introductions are among the most enjoyable parts of reading a novel.

Photo Credit: NBC

So it should come as no surprise that fans of a book often cry foul when film roles are cast with actors who don’t match their vision of how a particular character is supposed to look.

Photo Credit: Disney

Artist Brian Joseph Davis explores this conundrum with The Composites, his series of police sketches based on characters’ book descriptions.

Davis uses basic law enforcement sketch software to create eerily accurate black and white portraits of some of literature’s most famous faces, which has given us the perfect opportunity to compare them to their movie counterparts.

Some can be remarkably accurate, as you can see with Russell Crowe’s portrayal of Javert in the 2012 screen version of Les Misérables

Javert, Les Misérables, written by Victor Hugo, portrayed by Russell Crowe

Or Rooney Mara’s take on Lisbeth Salander from The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo

Photo Credit: Brian Davis, Columbia Pictures

Lisbeth Salander, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, written by Stieg Larsson, portrayed by Rooney Mara

…but others were wildly off.

Frankenstein’s Monster looked much different on screen than it did in the book.

The Monster, Frankenstein, written by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, portrayed by Boris Karloff

Take a look at these famous characters and let us know which ones you think were accurately represented and which ones seriously missed the mark.

Annie Wilkes, Misery, written by Stephen King, portrayed by Kathy Bates

Photo Credit: Brian Davis, Red Bank Films

Carrie White, Carrie, written by Stephen King, portrayed by Sissy Spacek

Photo Credit: Brian Davis, Focus Features

Christian Grey, Fifty Shades of Grey, written by E. L. James, portrayed by Jamie Dornan

Photo Credit: Brian Davis, Orion Pictures

Clarice Starling, The Silence of the Lambs, written by Thomas Harris, portrayed by Jodie Foster

Count Dracula, Dracula, written by Bram Stoker, portrayed by Bela Lugosi

Photo Credit: Brian Davis, Warner Bros

Daisy Buchanan, The Great Gatsby, written by F. Scott Fitzgerald, portrayed by Carey Mulligan

Photo Credit: Brian Davis, Zoetrope Studios

Dallas Winston, The Outsiders, written by S.E. Hinton, portrayed by Matt Dillon

Photo Credit: Brian Davis, Orion Pictures

Hannibal Lecter, The Silence of the Lambs, written by Thomas Harris, portrayed by Anthony Hopkins

Humbert Humbert, Lolita, written by Vladimir Nabokov, portrayed by James Mason

Photo Credit: Brian Davis, Warner Bros

Jack Torrance, The Shining, written by Stephen King, portrayed by Jack Nicholson

Photo Credit: Brian Davis, Lionsgate

Katniss Everdeen, The Hunger Games, written by Suzanne Collins, portrayed by Jennifer Lawrence

Photo Credit: Brian Davis, Zoetrope Studios

Kurtz, Heart of Darkness, written by Joseph Conrad, portrayed by Marlon Brando in Apocalypse Now.

Photo Credit: Brian Davis, American Zoetrope

Lux Lisbon, The Virgin Suicides, written by Jeffrey Eugenides, portrayed by Kirsten Dunst

Photo Credit: Brian Davis, 20th Century Fox

Marla Singer, Fight Club, written by Chuck Palahniuk, portrayed by Helena Bonham Carter

Norman Bates, Psycho, written by Robert Bloch, portrayed by Anthony Perkins

Photo Credit: Brian Davis, Warner Bros

Sam Spade, The Maltese Falcon, written by Dashiell Hammett, portrayed by Humphrey Bogart

Photo Credit: Brian Davis, Miramax

Tom Ripley, The Talented Mr. Ripley, written by Patricia Highsmith, portrayed by Matt Damon

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