Jul. 24th, 2009

[identity profile] mbarker.livejournal.com
Original posting 19 July 2009

Let's see.

We're writing a quest story. And I've rambled a little about the inciting incident, and suggested that perhaps Jim Butcher's story skeleton might be useful to put backbone in your tale. "When something happens, you are protagonist pursues a goal. But will he succeed when the antagonist provides opposition?"

Another part of Butcher's blogging over here http://jimbutcher.livejournal.com/ talks about interesting characters. After all, you got at least a protagonist and an antagonist, if not a few supporting characters. So how do you make characters interesting? Jim Butcher suggests five key points.

The first is exaggeration. It may seem melodramatic and certainly not egalitarian, but interesting characters are a little bit bigger than life. The easiest way to do this is simply exaggeration.

A second, related approach is exotic positions. Nothing to do with the Kama Sutra or Kinsey Reports, and Mrs. Grundy won't even get excited. This is simply unusual work or social positions. And as someone once told me, almost anybody else's work is more exciting than our own. So don't be too fast to decide that stocker in a grocery or wearing the golden arches aren't exotic positions -- just consider providing enough detail to make them interesting.

Butcher's third point is unusual. He focuses on the introduction -- how you bring your character into the story. He suggests that a characteristic entry action -- something that your character does whenever they come on stage -- can help to make them interesting.

The fourth part is verisimilitude. We like characters to seem real. We need to see their emotions, reactions, and decisions, and feel like this is the way people act. Butcher suggests that tags and traits -- two or three per character -- are a useful way to organize this.

Finally, there's that funny thing called empathy. If the reader feels for the character, they are invested in the character, they are going to be interested. There's a little bit of a chicken-and-egg thing here, because it's not always clear which comes first, being interesting or having empathy. But when the characters feel real, and the plot causes them real trouble, readers are likely to root for them. And vice versa -- when you're rooting for a character, they feel real, they're interesting.

Okay? Admittedly, we're dealing with short stories. And you may feel as if you don't have time for a lot of deep character development. At the same time, you want to have enough characterization to make the story exciting. And here's some clues about things you might want to use in building your characters. Exaggeration, exotic positions, the character introduction, verisimilitude, and empathy.

So write!
[identity profile] mbarker.livejournal.com
Original posting 20 July 2009

Writers' Digest, October 2004, pages 26 to 33, has a collection of short "nuggets of wisdom" related to getting published. Maria Schneider is the author of the compilation. Take a deep breath, and here we go:
"Find your theme -- illness, abuse, bigotry, poverty, love, separation, justice -- and weave it like a master craftsman. It can meander through your book like a winding, beckoning path or be as painful as an open, gushing wound, but don't lose it in the trappings of the tale." Nancy Hendrickson
Theme? Ah, now that's an interesting suggestion. After you get done with the craft -- who are the characters, what's the plot, where are we going, what happens along the way, how do we raise the stakes, get everyone involved, and hit that climax -- there's still this notion of theme. What's the story about? Not to lean too heavily on the moral of the story, because that's often overdone, but what's the golden thread that ties it all together? Romance stories usually are about love and human relationships. Most of the samurai dramas are about justice at some level. Maybe that's how they tie into westerns -- which also often are about justice.

Something to think about. What is the theme of your story? How does it get expressed? How do you manage to show it to the readers without being overbearing about "THE MORAL OF THE STORY IS..."? Do you start with your theme, and wrap the story around it, or do you let the story show you the theme as it develops? When you are revising, do you do a pass through the story with theme in mind? What do you adjust in that pass?

Profile

The Place For My Writers Notes

February 2025

S M T W T F S
      1
2 345 6 7 8
910 11121314 15
161718192021 22
232425262728 

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 11th, 2025 07:06 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios