Coffee House Writers

Main Menu

  • Home
  • Article Categories
    • Fiction
      • Action & Adventure
      • Fantasy
      • Historical Fiction
      • Horror
      • Mystery
      • Romance
      • Science Fiction
      • Speculative Fiction
      • Suspense & Thrillers
      • Westerns
      • Women’s Fiction
      • Women Sleuths
    • Nonfiction
      • Astrology & Tarot
      • Biographies
      • Business
      • Creativity
      • Creative Nonfiction
      • Cooking, Food & Drink
      • Culture
      • Current Affairs & Politics
      • Design, Fashion & Style
      • Entertainment
      • Environment
      • Health & Wellness
      • History
      • Home & Garden
      • Lifestyle
      • Media
      • Memoir & Autobiographies
      • Paranormal
      • Parenting & Family
      • Reviews
      • Science & Technology
      • Self-Help & Relationships
      • Spiritual & Religious
      • Sports
      • Travel
      • True Crime
    • Poetry
      • Acrostic
  • About Us
    • Our Story
    • Our Founder
  • Meet Our Admin
    • Chief Editors
    • Editors
  • Testimonials
  • Apply
  • Login

logo

Coffee House Writers

  • Home
  • Article Categories
    • Fiction
      • Action & Adventure
      • Fantasy
      • Historical Fiction
      • Horror
      • Mystery
      • Romance
      • Science Fiction
      • Speculative Fiction
      • Suspense & Thrillers
      • Westerns
      • Women’s Fiction
      • Women Sleuths
    • Nonfiction
      • Astrology & Tarot
      • Biographies
      • Business
      • Creativity
      • Creative Nonfiction
      • Cooking, Food & Drink
      • Culture
      • Current Affairs & Politics
      • Design, Fashion & Style
      • Entertainment
      • Environment
      • Health & Wellness
      • History
      • Home & Garden
      • Lifestyle
      • Media
      • Memoir & Autobiographies
      • Paranormal
      • Parenting & Family
      • Reviews
      • Science & Technology
      • Self-Help & Relationships
      • Spiritual & Religious
      • Sports
      • Travel
      • True Crime
    • Poetry
      • Acrostic
  • About Us
    • Our Story
    • Our Founder
  • Meet Our Admin
    • Chief Editors
    • Editors
  • Testimonials
  • Apply
  • Login
  • Underneath the Surface of Optimism

  • Climbing the Stairs

  • There’s a Crack in the Floor

  • Dogs

  • Zombie Killer Squad: Chapter Ten

  • Of Lockets and Pomegranates: Chapter 9

  • The Memories of Us

  • Well…Do You?

  • Meetings

  • Worth it in the End

  • Lover of the Queen: Procession

  • Protest

  • The Invitation: Part 5

  • In Defense of Doing Nothing

  • Teen Witch’s Survival Guide: Chapter 4

  • Speak Peace

  • Uncle Albert’s Ghostly Encounter

  • Types of Words

  • My Savior Came Flipping Tables

  • Of Lockets and Pomegranates: Chapter 8

CreativityFictionEntertainment
Home›Nonfiction›Creativity›Eerie Writing Prompts

Eerie Writing Prompts

By Donna Trovato
July 8, 2019
6660
0
Share:
Featured photo by Donna Trovato
4
(1)

Whether you’re a serious writer or an occasional writer, a writing prompt can help you to turn a blank piece of paper into a completed, creative story. Prompts give you something specific to focus on and often gets the wheels turning. They can also trigger a particular memory or exciting event, which can work its way into your story.

Writing is one of my favorite things to do, and I’ve been known to peruse through a few online prompts to help conjure up a few ideas. Another thing that works for me is to use my senses to help generate ideas.

Sight– After seeing a photo of a lovely garden, it can become the premise for an evil creature living underground. Or, if I’m out running errands and drive passed a distant hillside, it can become the get-away for an apocalyptic themed story.

Hearing– Hearing something on the news, a television program, during a movie, or if someone mentions something peculiar, my mind takes note. It files it away for use in story ideas.

Smell– When an odor wafts by, it alerts my olfactory sense which can either provoke a delightful idea or perhaps a dreadful concept for a story.

Taste– Tasting a particular food that is unusual or unique can cause my mind to generate an idea for a hunger-related struggle for a character or a food-related affinity/obsession. Details such as this can help bring depth to a character or the story itself.

Touch– Raindrops falling upon my arm, brisk breezes ruffling my hair, or a ray of sunlight warming my face helps me to depict what a character feels.

I thought it would be fun and perhaps helpful to create a list of eerie writing prompts. So here is a list of ten possibilities:

  1. You wake in the middle of the night, and the power is out. You hear growling inside your house even though you don’t own a pet.

 

  1. You suffer a head injury and soon realize you’ve acquired the ability to read the minds of others, and your co-worker is planning to murder his wife.

 

  1. A highly infectious and deadly virus spreads, and the only cure is to consume something unthinkable.

 

  1. You pick up your new prescription glasses from the ophthalmologists, and when you put them on, you can see spirits–good and evil.

 

  1. You doze off while watching TV with your family during the daytime. When you wake, it’s as if years have passed. Cobwebs clutter the room, and no one is around.

 

  1. You’re at work when a bright flash, similar to lightning, strikes. You realize everyone around you has gone into a sort of trance. Blood drips from their eyes as they sit or stand in place.

 

  1. You go into your basement to search for your camping equipment and find a small, unlocked door behind all the gear. When you open it, you find a tunnel with fresh blood splattered upon the walls.

 

  1. Your childhood teddy bear, now displayed on a shelf, hops off, sprints toward the knives and retrieves the longest one. It charges at you and says, “Chucky and Annabelle got nothin’ on me!”

 

  1. You order lunch at a café, then leave the table to use the restroom. When you return, everyone is dead.

 

  1. You’re watching your favorite tv program when the signal disappears. Static fills the screen then a yellow-eyed, hooded figure appears on the screen and warns you that the next global pandemic is coming.

Hopefully, one of the above prompts will help you to create an eerie thriller, horror, or suspenseful-based story. The creative writing process is different for every person. There is no right or wrong way to create a short story or a novel for that matter. Have fun with it!

Click on a star to rate it!

Average rating 4 / 5. Vote count: 1

No votes so far! Be the first to rate this post.

As you enjoyed this post...

Follow us on social media!

Oh no!

Let us improve this post!

Tell us how we can improve this post?

TagsFearwritingshort storythrillercreative writingWriting promptseerie
Previous Article

Influential Yellow Journalism

Next Article

Orion’s Embrace Part 9

0
Shares
  • 0
  • +
  • 0
  • 0

Donna Trovato

Related articles More from author

  • scars, pain
    CreativitySelf-Help & RelationshipsPoetryEnvironmentMemoir & AutobiographiesHealth & Wellness

    Our Gods, Our Husks – Free-Verse Poem

    July 13, 2020
    By Xander S. Lee
  • man watching sunset in front of water
    Health & WellnessCreativityParenting & FamilySelf-Help & RelationshipsLifestyleNonfiction

    I’m A Waste

    March 7, 2022
    By Jessica Kay
  • Dextrose Bag on IV Stand
    HorrorFiction

    Waking Up: Mother – Part 4

    May 18, 2020
    By Lo
  • Memoir & AutobiographiesScience & TechnologyEntertainmentLifestyleCultureMedia

    The End Of 2019: Looking Back On A Decade (Part 2)

    December 16, 2019
    By Scarlet Noble
  • The moon at midnight
    EnvironmentPoetry

    Moonstruck At Midnight

    March 18, 2024
    By Ivor Steven
  • Photo Credit @ Free-Photos
    Creativity

    25 Reasons Why I Write

    December 16, 2018
    By J.C Ballard

Leave a reply Cancel reply

You may be interested

  • Old leather stools in front of a bar
    FictionSpeculative Fiction

    Meetings

  • jackcoleroad
    HistoryMysteryHorrorCreativityFictionEntertainment

    Alabama’s Jack Cole Road

  • Lo Potter's hands with vitiligo
    Health & WellnessCreativityParenting & FamilySelf-Help & RelationshipsFictionMemoir & AutobiographiesCultureEntertainment

    Stronger

Timeline

  • December 1, 2025

    Underneath the Surface of Optimism

  • December 1, 2025

    Climbing the Stairs

  • December 1, 2025

    There’s a Crack in the Floor

  • December 1, 2025

    Dogs

  • December 1, 2025

    Zombie Killer Squad: Chapter Ten

Latest Comments

  • Susi
    on
    November 3, 2025
    Beautiful, Ivor!

    Paddling In Time

  • Ivor Steven
    on
    October 30, 2025
    Thank you for your gracious words, Violet 😍📖🌏

    It Is Manuscript Time

  • violet
    on
    October 27, 2025
    So aptly 'you' Ivor! I love it!

    It Is Manuscript Time

  • Ivor Steven
    on
    October 24, 2025
    Many thanks for visiting my poem here at Coffee House Writers Magazine, and thank you for ...

    Paddling In Time

  • Ivor Steven
    on
    October 24, 2025
    Many thanks for visiting my poem here at Coffee House Writers Magazine, and thank you for ...

    Paddling In Time

About us

  • coffeehousewriters3@gmail.com

Donate to Coffee House Writers

Coindrop.to me

Follow us

© Copyright 2018-2025 Coffee House Writers. All Rights Reserved. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this site’s administrator and owner is strictly prohibited. Privacy Policy · Disclaimer