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Tag: fiction characters

Mind Mapping works for me:
My Mind Map 
In a critique group I asked the writers to list the people they’d rubbed shoulders with that day or that week. I also took the challenge and drew out my diagram. Each of us were amazed at the lives we touched.

 

Joyce, Karen, Audrey
The same happens with our fiction characters. If I want my main character to amount to anything, the reader needs to see them connecting with others:
Hiding Goals?
  • Those who appreciate them and those who don’t.
  • The people they choose to ignore.
  • The neighbor they haven’t spoken to in years.
  • The childhood friend who disappointed them.
We also need to see their dreams and goals.
  • Will they see the dream come to pass?
  • How will they respond if they never see the dream fulfilled?
  • Are their goals realistic?
  • Do they share their goals or hide them, afraid others won’t understand?
I’ve written and sold non-fiction, but last November I took the National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo) challenge to write 50,000 words in one month. I managed to first draft over 68,000. What a great reminder on character building. One of my big problems—I have a couple faultless characters.
New goal—create flawed humans!
Not Necessarily Physically Flawed 
Techniques best-selling western novelist Stephen Bly uses when his stories are dragging:
  1. Shoot someone.
  2. Introduce an obnoxious character.  Choose the person who would annoy your character the most?
  3. Go to the quirk (a quirk in a character).
  4. Lose something. Your adrenaline flows when you lose something.
  5. Embarrass your protagonist. What’s the most embarrassing thing that could happen?
  6. Have protagonist kiss the wrong person.
  7. Put your protagonist in a hopeless situation. Then get him out of it.
  8. Have someone crucial to the plot disappear.
  9. Start a rumor about your protagonist. Go to the attic.
  10. Uncover something mysterious about the past.
Check out Stephen’s books and ministry at at Bly books. He also has a fun book for writers. Check it out.
Still Lionhearted, Kat