I'm putting together workshops for my
new course and it occurred to me that when writing fiction you need
three basic things: the people (your characters); the place (your
chosen setting or settings); the plot (the structure and theme.) I've
put some of my thoughts together as three blogs and I trust my
students will forgive their workshops being slightly second-hand.
Part I: People.
Your characters are the thing that
makes your story live. There are only a few plot lines in the world
and it is your characters that make people want to read your story.
Nobody wants to spend their leisure time with somebody they find
boring and it's the same with readers and characters in stories. If
your central characters are warm and lively (and personally I like a
good dollop of humour too) then the reader will want to spend time
with them, even if at that point in the characters' lives they are
having a tough time.
Your characters will be different
depending on the viewpoint you are using. 1st Person is more
immediate and, especially when teamed with Present Tense, it is
amazingly effective, but it's not an easy combination to use. 3Rd
Person, Past Tense is usually easier to handle (at least most people
seem to find it so). 3rd Person can be very close, following the
character's internal thoughts, or it can be more distant, recording
what they do and say. The risk with the latter is that the character
can seem very distant and the reader won't get involved. The only way
to find out what suits you is to play with Person and Tense, and even
then, what works for one story may not work for another.
One of the trickiest things when
creating characters set in the past, is to convince your reader to
accept attitudes and behaviour that we cannot relate to or even find
objectionable today, and still make the reader care enough about the
people we've created to keep on reading.
In a novel you can have a wide cast of
characters, but in a short story it is wise to limit the number. If a
character is not useful, no matter how much you like them, they have
no place in the story. But don't delete them, cut and paste them into
a file to use in another story at a later date.
There is an on-going debate amongst
writers about whether characters 'come to life' and take over the
novel. When put like that it sounds really pretentious, but
characters do take on a personality of their own, and if they don't
the writer has failed in a fundamental part of their job. I love it
when a reader feels they know my characters. When discussing The
Terminal Velocity of Cats a reader commented to me, 'It's typical of
Mia, to make a joke even when she's really scared.' I thanked the
reader and thought with glee, 'My work here is done. I got it right.'
When I was an inexperienced writer, I
spent an entire book trying to force a middle-aged woman, who had
taken refuge from an abusive marriage, into bed with another
(perfectly pleasant) guy. Whatever I did it wouldn't work until I
faced the fact that of course she wouldn't do that. It would take
years before she'd trust another man in that way. Apologies to Gina
(my character in the book), it won't happen again.
When writing, respect your characters
and don't be afraid to let them lead you, at least some of the time.
Consider it as getting to know a friend a bit better every day. It
doesn't mean you're losing control of your book, just sharing it.
After all, your characters have a stake in what happens as well.
No comments:
Post a Comment