By:
Laurel Garver
Characters
ought to be more than a name and job title, like Joan Bunderson, special
operative or Kyle Kowalski, hockey star. To breathe on the page, your
characters need to have an outer life that's relational beyond work and an
inner life of passions, drives, attitudes, memories, wounds, and fears.
Below is a fairly exhaustive list of questions to brainstorm when developing a new character, especially the protagonist. Obviously you don't need to know all these things about him or her to proceed with a story. However, wrestling with some of these questions might open up new avenues for inner and outer conflict to arise, or suggest interesting plot or setting elements you hadn't before considered. So choose a few from each menu or tackle them all, your choice.
If interviewing is your favorite research method, you might find it beneficial to find real people with similarities to your character and ask them a few of the questions. Even if your character is quite different personality-wise, a
I suspect some of these questions might be useful for getting to know just about anyone if you're ever at a loss for conversation ideas.
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Read the full article HERE!
~*~
If you
missed my writing & marketing tweets and retweets yesterday, here they are
again:
- How to Know If Your Book Marketing Campaigns Made You Money - BookBub Unbound http://ow.ly/K4htW
- Update to Page Like Counts | Facebook for Business http://ow.ly/K4in7
- 5 Psychological Blocks that Stop Bloggers Going from Good to Great : @ProBlogger http://ow.ly/K4lkX
- 5 Tips for Photographing Your Everyday - Click it Up a Notch http://ow.ly/K4q6Z
- Anne R. Allen's Blog: How to Write a Prize-Worthy Short Story: A Step-by-Step Guide http://ow.ly/K4Eyd
- Self-publishing lets women break book industry's glass ceiling, survey finds | Books | The Guardian http://ow.ly/K51XC
- You Wrote a Killer Love Story…But Did You Romance the Reader? by Angela Ackerman | Romance University http://ow.ly/K51Zx
- The Ten Commandments of Writing Failure | http://ow.ly/K5248
- Writer Unboxed » Simple Promo Tip: Call Your Book By its Name http://ow.ly/K526J
- Two main impact characters? http://ow.ly/K52hS
- 5 Ways to Improve Your Writing Style | Writing Is Hard Work http://ow.ly/K52lD
- Children with Divorced Parents | motivation for moving beyond your writing habits http://ow.ly/K52Ch
- Use Attitude When Introducing Characters - Elizabeth Spann Craig http://ow.ly/K52Eu
- Who are you really? 52 questions to go deeper with characters ~ Laurel's Leaves http://ow.ly/K52FH
- Blood-Red Pencil: Using Click to Tweet http://ow.ly/K536z
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