Archive for March, 2009

11
Mar

How Much Should Your Character Know?

   Posted by: Michell    in Irreverent Muse

It’s always a challenge to keep your characters from knowing too much.  After all, your characters come out of your head and you are the one with all the answers.  How can they not know too much?

I realized that I had the problem after one of my protagonists acted too understanding towards another character. That compassion, while praiseworthy was not natural.  The character was rude, obnoxious and mean to my protagonist.  I didn’t even notice it until it was pointed out to me.   I had to step back and really evaluate what was going on.

I came to the conclusion that the reaction was normal only if the protagonist knew the demons that haunted the mean character.  Since the protagonist was not psychic it didn’t make sense.  I had to rewrite large sections of dialogue that defined how they interacted.  It meant I had to work harder to define and grow the relationship.  The characters actually argued and fought along the way.  In other words, the relationship was normal.

The gotcha with this was that I tried really hard to only let the characters “know” the things that came to them through direct experience and I still missed the piece that defined how they treated one another.  It was an insidious little problem that I almost missed.  It took an outsider’s perception to point it out to me.

Now that I know I can be extra diligent and hopefully the way my characters interact will be more believable and the stories better.

Personal Update

My rewrite is almost complete. and one of my YA novels is currently in front of a publisher.  My podcast now has two episodes complete and posted and a third is on its way.  Beyond that, nothing new to report.

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You have a character in your head who is clamoring to get out.  You already know his or her entire backstory:  where he/she was born, who were the parents, first loves, first broken bone, etc. etc.  You also know how the character should grow during the story.

So far so good.

Then you start to write and the character ‘magically’ goes from being a hard-headed bitch (substitute bastard for a guy if you like) to someone who gets all emotional over the smallest thing.  And it all happens in a few short chapters.  Maybe even in a few paragraphs.

Sound familiar?

It happened to me in my book “The Goddess Renewed”.  One of my protagonists, Paena (female, in case you’re wondering) is a major ice queen when she first meets my other protagonist, Kalten.  She acts that way because Kalten is a soldier and soldiers were responsible for the massacre of her family.  Makes sense so far.

I had intended for Paena to thaw to the point where she and Kalten are partners.  Not lovers.  Not two people who flirt, but two people who trust and depend on each other.  I wanted Paena to discover who Kalten was and grow to realize that all soldiers are not murders.

Kalten comes towards Paena from the opposite direction.  He doesn’t want anything to do with this harpy bitch who is making his life miserable.  Unfortunately, he has no other choice but to work with her.  Eventually I had hoped that he would see her as more than hard-boiled.

The problem I had was I knew these people inside and out.  I knew how they would grow and I was too impatient to draw that relationship out.  I let Paena change too quickly.

Fortunately for me, my first reader pointed out the problem.  He told me that her abrupt change was unbelievable.  That little slap on the wrist really helped me realize my mistake.

Every piece of writing advice mentions how you must give your characters their own ‘voice’.  My mistake was changing that voice too fast.

If I were to be totally honest with myself, the mistake wasn’t purely due to impatience on my part.  I have edited, written and rewritten this particular story so many times that I have lost track (at least a little) of where my character is in the evolution of their personalities.  Now I know what to watch for and I know how to fix it.  Watch out boys, the bitch is back!

Personal Update

I’ve hit a bit of a lull the past week.  I did manage to get my second episode of “Get Published” recorded and posted.  I’m pretty happy with the episode although I did experience an annoying hum in various places that I couldn’t edit out.  I’ll try to avoid that next episode.

“Mik Murdoch” is still in front of a publisher and I’m still in the home stretch for the final (honest) rewrite of “The Goddess Renewed”.  I’m in the process of researching a market for “Summer Camp Secrets” before I send it out.

I’m really excited about finishing the rewrite of “Goddess” because I have a couple writing projects that have been nagging me.  The one I’m probably most excited about is my podcast serial SciFi Comedy.  I know it’s going to be a LOT of fun to write and record.  I may even be using guest voices.  Stay tuned.

Have a fantastic week!

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