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Saturday, March 23, 2013

Marrying Art With Perseverance


The Character Must Be Interesting…

The evolution of the character begins with an idea, even a silly situation, or a fleeting memory of a song and girl at a bus stop.  For the writer, the easy part is the inspiration, and then continues with hard work.  Maybe the character has form: eye color, lanky and tall, great singing voice and then it is up to the writer to marry art with perseverance.

One of the most common recurring failures of many short stories is the lack of well developed protagonists.  The truly great characters that make us want to read more don’t come out of the ether in one shake.  We need to fall in love with them.  One of the reasons we put stories down and don’t come back is the lack of interest in the characters.  The plot, story arc, all of the situations presented may be fascinating, amazing, unbelievable and cool; but none of it matters if the characters aren’t interesting, provocative, and a little amazing.

There is a writer friend of mine who has notebooks filled with character development.  Back story, pages and pages of back story.  Rarely are these words ever seen in the finished works, but nonetheless it fills the writer with a defined world of vision and the character development is filled with dimension.  What is written in those notebooks?  It’s filled with stories of first dates, job interviews, memories of vomiting in the neighbor’s bushes, scary near misses and perfect scores in skeet ball.  It is truly the tenacity of world building that creates a work that is special.  But it also simplifies the work for the author.  When I create a character and start writing the story without filling the void with facts about him or her, I find it more likely the story never gets finished.  The art of defining the world of the story often comes with defining the characters prior to the first word hitting the page.

The back story can be as detailed as birth, early school days, collegiate life, or maybe hitchhiking across Europe.  Pages of family history, especially the Mom and Dad, first loves, sexual and intimate stories all fill the void in a writer’s mind with details that will become vital for the story presently coming into fruition, and for creating striking, complex and obviously human characters and villains.

This is the perseverance.

I believe it is critical to consider the human being as analogue to the characters and their development.  Writers will tell you that a good character can exist as the culmination of several people that really exist in life.  The most important is to bring them to life- for you the author.  Once they are successfully incubated, they can truly take on the forms and tell the story – honestly and hopefully make readers fall in love with them.

Who are the characters that we love?  The ones that we like better than real people?  Celia Bowen, Frodo, Lolita, Luke Skywalker, Meursault, Prince Andrey Bolkonsky, and so many more…
What is it about them that we love?
Answering that question may be one of the reasons I continue to write and read.  Seeking the truth…