By Nancy Roe
Major characters include the
people we care about. We love them or hate them. Fear them or hope they
succeed. They show up again and again in the story. The story, to one degree or
another, is about them and readers expect to find out what happens to them by
the end. Their desires and actions drive the story forward and carry it through
all its twists and turns.
Twelve Tips on Major Characters:
1.
Major
characters have to be interesting and believable enough for people to want to
read about what they do.
2.
Major
characters need to be characterized. Because they really matter to the story,
you can devote as much time to them as required.
3.
Decide on dominant
traits and major actions of your major characters first. This helps shape the
plot of your story.
4.
The major character
should change significantly.
5.
To avoid confusion,
have all the major character’s names start with a different letter. Also, try
to vary lengths and sound patterns. (not: Bob, Tom, Pete, Jeff)
6.
Keep one name per
character. (not: Bob, Bobby, Buddy all for the same person)
7.
What is the
character’s internal motivation and what does he or she really want?
8.
What peculiar traits
(appearance, personality, behavior, mannerisms, speech) might you highlight to
make the character seem fuller?
9.
Focus on the emotional
conflicts of your major characters or when the character is put in any type of
conflict, otherwise the reader won’t care.
10.
Start your book in a
way that gives the story the right tone and introduce the main character. (Any
opening scene that doesn’t introduce the main character is a prologue.)
11.
If you’re having
problems with your major character, picture yourself talking to him or her. Why
are you so annoying? Why don’t you do something?
12.
Stories
are mainly about people and what they do. Major characters are the ones who
must satisfy the following three questions the readers are constantly,
unconsciously, asking.
a.
So
what? Why does the reader care what’s going on in the story? Why is this
important?
b.
Oh
yeah? Would anybody really do that? Wasn’t that too convenient? How dumb does
the author think the reader is?
On Monday I will be
blogging on Writing Minor Characters.
When Nancy Roe was twelve, she wrote an
autobiography for a sixth grade English assignment. In the last chapter, Nancy
wrote that she wanted to be an author. When she turned fifty, her dreams came
true! And she hasn't stopped writing since.Nancy also blogs at
NancyRoeAuthor.com. You'll find articles on organizing tips, recipes, craft
ideas, computer tips, grammar tips, and unusual holidays. Even her dog, Shadow,
writes an article--there has to be humor, and he's a funny guy! Nancy is a Midwest farm
girl at heart and currently lives in Tennessee with her husband and four-legged
child. Follow Nancy on her various social media links: Website: www.NancyRoeAuthor.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/NancyRoeAuthor
Twitter: http://twitter.com/NancyRoeAuthor
Pinterest: http://pinterest.com/NancyRoeAuthor
Books:
www.NancyRoeOnAmazon.com
No comments:
Post a Comment