By Dan
Walsh
My 21
novels have thus far garnered over 7,200 Amazon Reviews
(Avg 4.6 Stars) and over 18,000 Ratings on GoodReads. The most consistent
comment readers make (and my most favorite) goes something like, “Once
I started reading the book, I couldn’t put it down.” They don’t just
say this on my suspense novels but even the more romantic stories. Even with my
Christmas novels.
But
this month,
I want to write about the 2nd most consistent comment I get (and my 2nd most favorite). They go kinda like this:
I want to write about the 2nd most consistent comment I get (and my 2nd most favorite). They go kinda like this:
·
“The characters were so REAL and stirred every
emotion possible in me. Will definitely be reading another.”
·
“Dan Walsh's characters are well-developed,
believable and so personal that it is easy to visualize yourself in the midst
of the protagonist's search.”
·
“I’ve enjoyed all your books so far. You have
such a talent for portraying each character…”
I love
reading things like this about my books (what author wouldn’t?).
Not just
because it makes me feel good (which it does) but also because of what it means
for my future as an author. It means people will keep buying my books, and I
will get to keep writing them. How do I know this?
A few
years ago, I did a reader survey with my 4,000-plus “Likes” on Facebook (back
when FB used to let folks who Liked your page read what you posted). I listed
the 7 major components of a fiction novel and asked them to list the Top 3
things that mattered most to them as Readers. The #1 that got the most #1 Votes
(and was in everyone’s Top 3) was: “Characters
You Really Care About.”
If you
can write books that readers can’t stop reading once they start, populated by
characters they really care about, they will buy your books (and keep buying
new ones). So, this month (and probably next), I thought I’d share some of the
things I do to create such characters in my novels.
Let’s
begin with this…every novel consists of 2 Main Ingredients: The Story and The Characters. I find that most writers have an easier time
working with and writing about the story than they do creating truly solid,
interesting, compelling, fun-to-read-about characters. But as you can see from
the survey, readers care as much about the characters, if not more, than they
do about the quality of the story.
If your
characters are perfunctory, boring, superficial, overly flawed and/or not
fun-to-be-with kind of people, readers will lose interest in your story before
they’re 10 chapters in (no matter how great it is). You have to spend as much
time making your characters come alive and seem like real people to the reader,
as you do making the story exciting, suspenseful, romantic, etc.
Herein
lies the problem for many authors. THEY THEMSELVES (in real life) are not
solid, interesting, compelling and/or fun-to-be-with people. And to some
extent, they know this about themselves. So, if you’re not that kind of person
in real life, how can you create characters who are like that in your books? I
mean, aren’t we supposed to, “Write What You Know?” How can we write or create
characters who are way more compelling and interesting than we are ourselves?
Trust
me. It can be done. I know this firsthand.
See, in
real life, although I’m told I’m a fairly likable guy, the truth is I’m NOT
EVEN HALF as interesting or fascinating or compelling or as fun-to-be-with as
many of the characters in my novels. They often do things and feel things and
say things that would never occur to me to do or say in real life. I’m far too
timid and reserved (for crying out loud, I was a pastor for 25 years).
In my
books I’m an orphaned child in the 1940s. I’m a widowed Italian grandmother, a
fascinating but illiterate Negro slave, a young woman craving the love of a
truly decent man, a WW2 fighter pilot who gets the girl, a history professor
who solves murders and kills bad guys, a Viet Nam vet whose lost everything but
hope, a dog who loses the owner he loves and loves a new owner he saves.
Did you
get that last one? I’m a dog? Sometimes I have to be a dog?
How can
I write about all these fascinating people (and animals) when I’m only just me?
When I’m all I have to work with?
Well,
the fact is…it can be done. But I can’t tell you how, or any of the specific
things I’ve learned because this is a blog, and we’ve run out of time. Come
back next Monday for Part 2 of, “I’ve Gotta Be Me, She Said” (the title is a
clue).
Dan Walsh is the bestselling author of 21
novels (all available on Amazon), including The Unfinished Gift,
Rescuing Finley, When Night Comes and The Reunion (now being made into
a feature film). Over 750,000 of his books are in print or downloaded. He's won
both the Carol and Selah Awards multiple times, 4 of his novels have been
finalists for RT Reviews Inspirational Novel of the Year. Reviewers often
remark about Dan's rich, character-driven storylines and page-turning suspense
(even with his more inspirational books). He's been writing full-time since
2010. He and his wife Cindi have been married 42 years, have 2 grown children
and 4 grandchildren. They live in the Daytona Beach area, where Dan grew up.
You can follow him on Facebook or Twitter, read his blog, or preview all his
books by visiting his website at http://www.danwalshbooks.com Dan’s books: If These Walls Could Talk - DAN'S NEWEST
NOVEL, When Night Comes, Remembering Dresden, Unintended Consequences, Perilous Treasure, Rescuing Finley, Finding Riley, Saving Parker and The Deepest Waters (2nd Ed)
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