Notes from the Inkpot
Writing, teaching, creating - one ink-stained idea at a time.

How to Teach All Summer in a Day (Including Discussion Ideas & Creative Writing Activities)
Explore how to teach Ray Bradbury’s “All Summer in a Day” with meaningful discussions, tension-mapping, and creative writing tasks. This post shares classroom ideas, writing prompts, and ready-to-use resources to help students connect deeply with Margot’s story of isolation, empathy, and missed sunlight.

Famous First Lines as Writing Prompts: How to Spark Creativity Without Reinventing the Wheel
First lines are where everything begins -and for writers, they’re often the hardest part. That pressure to hook the reader immediately can be overwhelming. That’s exactly why I started collecting real first lines from published novels.
I use these with students to take the pressure off. Instead of staring at a blank screen, they start with something brilliant and build from there. It gives them structure and freedom all at once. It’s a reminder that writing isn’t about perfection. It’s about momentum.
Some lines are eerie. Some are emotional. Some are bold, jarring, or just weird enough to make you lean in. But the best ones all do the same thing: they open a door.
And that’s what these prompts are about. Opening the door, so the story can step through.