31 Day Writing Tips - Day 14

@just4him (323168)
Green Bay, Wisconsin
May 14, 2019 5:12pm CST
One of the essential elements of writing your story is character development. You can't just put any name on a page and expect it to fit in your story. Think about all the characters you know from your favorite books or classics. Would A Christmas Carol be the same if Ebenezer Scrooge had a different name? Maybe, but doubtful. And what about Atticus Finch? Would To Kill a Mockingbird be the same with a different name? Speak those names or many others and you immediately have an idea about the character, who he or she is and what kind of personality they have. Names are important. You need to consider what kind of book you're writing. Is it contemporary, western, mystery, science fiction, romance? Once you have your character, you need to dress him or her. Who are they? What is their catchphrase? If I said, fiddle-dee-dee, do you know who said it? An idea of war, scoundrels, and cads might come to mind. Love, family, regrets, determination, might also come to mind. Put that fiddle-dee-dee alongside "As God is my witness, I will never be hungry again", and you know exactly which character it belongs to. What kind of person will fill the hero and heroine roles in your stories? To find out what kind of person he or she is, you need to communicate with them. One method of communication is to have your character write you a letter about what they want to do or not do. Let them tell you what they fear the most and what they love the most and have your character be angry at you for stifling who they want to become. Get to know your character. Once you know your character, you will know how he or she will act in any given situation. You know if she will flee the hospital when the doctor asks her help to amputate a soldier, and you will know if she has the guts to kill a man whose intent was to steal whatever he could. Getting to know your character takes time. You won't know everything about your character when you finish your first draft. You'll have an idea about him or her. As you edit and revise your story, you give your characters the personality you started to develop in the rough draft. It's time to find out exactly who they are and if your audience will like them or hate them. You need to give them a purpose. Survival is a common purpose. Turning people from hating a person because of the color of their skin to fighting for them, is common. Fighting for what you believe in is also a common purpose. How you develop your characters to bring about the outcome you want, will show how well you develop the characters in your stories. Who are your favorite characters? Tell me why they're your favorite. Thanks for reading. Image courtesy of Pixabay.
7 people like this
5 responses
@DianneN (254949)
• United States
15 May 19
Characters can help make or break a good book.
2 people like this
@just4him (323168)
• Green Bay, Wisconsin
15 May 19
Yes, they can. So it's important how you develop them, starting with their name. My problem child, as I call my romance novel, went through three different names for my male lead before I agreed with his name. It fits him and the story. That one isn't finished yet but I think I'm getting close.
2 people like this
@DianneN (254949)
• United States
15 May 19
3 people like this
@FayeHazel (40230)
• United States
15 May 19
Wow. Cool. Thank you for sharing. I really liked that tip about have them write you a letter. That's fairly powerful. When I used to try writing more - I wondered how to quit writing me. (all of the characters used to be based on me, but I'm only coming at life from my own lens - so that gets boring after awhile.) I really liked Duditz (from "Dreamcatcher") John Coffee (from "The Green Mile"), Fox Mulder (the "X-Files"), Clarise Starling ("Silence of the Lambs") and yes... even Scarlette O'Hara
1 person likes this
@just4him (323168)
• Green Bay, Wisconsin
15 May 19
I worried about putting me in my stories then I read an article that said you can't not do it. There's a piece of me in every story I've written. Not all of me, just a couple of things. I've only seen the X-Files. And of course, Gone with the Wind. I'm currently watching Scarlette, the sequel to Gone With the Wind. I read the book many years ago and my daughter has it now. I didn't know they made it into a movie. It follows the book very well, though it's done in parts, I'm guessing at three as think it's two-thirds of the way through the story now.
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@just4him (323168)
• Green Bay, Wisconsin
17 May 19
@FayeHazel If you have Roku, it's on Tubi.
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@FayeHazel (40230)
• United States
17 May 19
@just4him Well, that's good to know. I guess it makes sense. We only know what we know. We only experience the world as we experience the world. Oh wow, I didn't know there was ever a sequel to "Gone with the Wind". I might have to check that out.
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@LadyDuck (502148)
• Italy
15 May 19
Character names most of the time are changed according to the language into which the book is translated, just because the name is important. As an example I searched about fiddle-dee-dee, because it did not ring any bell, well I have seen "Gone with the wind", but in Italian and there was no fiddle-dee-dee in the translation.
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@LadyDuck (502148)
• Italy
15 May 19
@just4him For those who do not speak English some names of characters mean nothing at all.
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@just4him (323168)
• Green Bay, Wisconsin
15 May 19
@LadyDuck I'm sure people don't pay attention to the meanings of a character's name. Though I always look at the character's name meaning before I use it.
1 person likes this
@just4him (323168)
• Green Bay, Wisconsin
15 May 19
That's interesting. I didn't realize different translations would leave out different words and phrases that make a character interesting.
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@simone10 (54180)
• Louisville, Kentucky
17 May 19
My favorite book is Gone With the Wind. And of course Scarlet is my favorite person along with Rhett Butler.
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@simone10 (54180)
• Louisville, Kentucky
18 May 19
@just4him it's so good! There are quite a few important differences between the book and movie. I used to have the book but it got lost over years of moving.
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@just4him (323168)
• Green Bay, Wisconsin
18 May 19
@simone10 I'm sorry it got lost.
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@just4him (323168)
• Green Bay, Wisconsin
17 May 19
I've never read the book, but I've seen the movie many times. I need to get my hands on the book.
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@josie_ (10033)
• Philippines
15 May 19
The Pink panther's Inspector Jacques Clouseau, Arthur Doyle's Sherlock holmes, Oscar Wilde's Dorian Gray and Emily Bronte's Heathcliff of Wuthering Heights. I like characters who have to wrestle with personal flaws. Men against himself.
1 person likes this
@just4him (323168)
• Green Bay, Wisconsin
15 May 19
Those are good examples. That's a good purpose in creating the character.