Here's
Alina Chase, kicking off our blog series for characters. Over the next
few days, we will be sharing character templates: Physical Traits,
Attitudes and Personality, Skills, Schedules, and Past. Good luck!
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Distinguished CharactersCreate One Trademark Feature
By Alina Chase
Whether you’re writing a novel or interviewing a football player for an
impossibly short article, you can’t afford to babble. Every description
must be relevant. Every word should be intentional.
That means choosing telling details, details that show more about a
person than appearance, details that clearly distinguish your
protagonist from other characters in your book and from protagonists in
similar books. Especially powerful are traits that hint of contrast or
conflict.
Why waste words describing the football player as tall and muscular?
Unless you say otherwise, we assume that he is. Surprise us by noting
how shy he is, that he sits like a girl or that his feet are so tiny
it’s a miracle they can support his bulk.
And
creating a single trademark feature for each character in your novel
can save a lot of mental energy dreaming up, describing--and keeping
track of--less distinguishing attributes. Let your readers fill in the
mundane details.
Picture a woman with very wide-set eyes. It’s fairly uncommon and can
be attractive. Jackie Kennedy had eyes like that. But push those eyes
apart another half inch and your woman looks like a lizard. In real
life, aren’t unusual features like this, and particularly imperfections,
what we notice first and remember longest? So give us the unexpected!
And note how easily nature’s quirks provide unique and welcome
springboards for conflict. Make your FBI agent so short that all he can
see in a crowd is boobs and navels, or so tall that he’s always noticed
(and then send him undercover to Japan where he towers over natives like
Godzilla). Give your gorgeous heroine crooked teeth. Give your defense
lawyer a lisp.
All you need is one distinguishing feature to begin bringing characters
and their stories alive in a way readers are sure to remember!
No comments:
Post a Comment