Monday, February 11, 2008
Heh. Bet that got your attention, didn't it? LOL! Well, I mean it -- in a way. As writers, all of us are faced with "creating our characters" or "makin' babies' of a sort. Honestly, it's one of my very favorite parts of the process. I'm very much a character-driven writer, and as such, I'm extremely careful with the entire process, from conception to birth. Some come into being very easily, while others -- whew -- others are real pains in the neck. But just like children, you're going to have some that are just better behaved than others.

I was asked for some advice earlier this this month about how to direct characters that have made cameos in earlier works and now are the stars of their own stories. These folks can either be a piece of cake to deal with -- or if left unattended for awhile, they can be the most difficult S.O.B.'s to deal with, bar none.

"But how can they be so difficult, Leslie?" you ask. "You've already molded them and given them motivation and we as readers have grown to love them from those other books they randomly appeared in. Remember?"

Argh. Yes. I remember. But think about how you'd feel if you were that character I'd lovingly created, mollycoddled and then...deserted. No, no, not on purpose. Of course not. I'd never willingly neglect my baby. But sometimes... well, sometimes there are other stories that cry out to be told and, well, the one that hollers the loudest gets my attention first.

Alas... this is where we run into trouble. It starts when we pick that character up again and put him/her into a starring role. Holy bull in a china shop, it's near-impossible to direct these folks now. Why? Simple. You see, after you gave birth to them, you released them into a world you created and guess what? They've continued to live and interact in this place without you! (gasp!) And how dare you come in and try to tell them what to do, when to do it and with strangers they've never met before? They've been getting along perfectly fine without you, thankyouverymuch. Hmph!

Er... you see what I'm saying? Basically, our little babies are now all grown-up and, as you probably know, grown-ups are so much harder to raise then kids. These characters can be guided though. Oh, yes... it can be done, but you have to conjure up a pretty hefty dose of patience. Keep that in mind when you're thinking of writing a series. When Peter Jackson decided to film all of the Lord of the Rings movies at once, I thought he was certifiably cuckoo, but now I get it.

As difficult as your characters can be, however, you always love them and you always want them to be the best they can be. Even if their best is to be a horrible, wicked villain. Hey, it happens. It's like that old commercial where the guy goes, "No one ever says: I want to be a drug dealer when I grow up." Shyeah, whatever, dude. I've had a couple of kids that were major drug runners, an embezzler and -- permit me to brag -- a pretty saucy crack whore. Oh, those crazy kids, they'll grow up to be anything! (And hey, every story needs a little flavor).

Have fun makin' your babies! Keep in mind the newer ones are generally more willing to listen to direction and can be manipulated easier than their older brothers and sisters. Heck, they're just thrilled for the attention, y'know? But enjoy it while it lasts. They grow out of this cute stage fast and before you can turn around good, they're off on their own, doing their own thing, living their own life -- without any help from you.



*sniffle*

Oh, my precious babies....!


Leslie Ann Dennis is the author of Reason to Believe, coming soon to The Wild Rose Press.

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posted by Leslie Ann Dennis at 12:29 AM |

8 Comments:

At February 11, 2008 at 12:48 PM, Blogger Sandra Cormier said........
I can just see my secondary character in Bad Ice (Bertie Gauthier) enthusiastically making more babies with his fiery French Canadian wife. All this without my permission, of course.

It feels like those interactive computer games like Animal Crossing, where if you leave the game alone for a while, the characters keep going, doing Heaven knows what until you check in with them.
 


At February 11, 2008 at 2:27 PM, Blogger Unknown said........
I so *get* this!
I've had to stop a story because I realized it was being told from the wrong person's perspective. And the person whose story it needed to be wasn't old enough yet to have their own story.
After it sat for a while (oh, say six years!) I came back and by then she had grown enough that I could make a story about her. Of course the original character had long since gone, but he seemed to be happy elsewhere. :-).
 


At February 11, 2008 at 5:39 PM, Blogger Zara Penney said........
I have a secondary who grew like topsy. He's a perfectly awful darling who just screamed a loud blah! I need to get out. I love him dearly and but for the current WIP I'd be back to continue through to the end... but I know where it will go. But yes, what you say is true.

But then on the other hand, I think that if you do have a character that is holding you back, you must know that it is time to let go. You love the character and feel safe but safe writing isn't exciting. It's stale writing and inside you know it and it's being labelled as 'writer's block' by you.

But isn't writer's block. It's just called - as on a computer...

Time for the refresh button.

Don't get stuck on a character just because you like him/her.
 


At February 11, 2008 at 6:03 PM, Blogger Gina Ardito aka Katherine Brandon said........
It isn't just that you've left them alone; it's also that you had already established them: their quirks, their humor, their looks, and now you can't suddenly turn around in Chapter 5 and say, "I think he should have a father he doesn't get along with..."

But somehow, we muddle thru.
 


At February 12, 2008 at 11:19 AM, Blogger Shakespeares Sister said........
This is a brilliant theory, and could well explain why, after almost four years of creative blockage, I'm not able to write the story I've been planning--a story belonging to a secondary character from long ago. Actually, your post here has given me permission to let go of the past and to look at the canvas of the future (which is blank, eek! But hopefully not for long). It's hard to part ways with our "babies," but all is not lost if we can let go of something that isn't working and trust our abilities as writers to invent something new and better.
 


At February 12, 2008 at 8:32 PM, Blogger Amber Green said........
(small voice) oh.

So that's what happened!
 


At February 13, 2008 at 3:01 PM, Blogger Judith Leger said........
Oh, yeah! You think they're going to behave but then wham they do something to really get on your nerves. That's even when you do a POV change for the scene.
 


At February 13, 2008 at 9:49 PM, Blogger Katie said........
I'm stamping my feet, though you can't see it. So in this case I can tell you about it. I'm wearing those awful new plastic clogs that sink when you walk. They are very, very comfy, and have cute little UT Longhorns on them. Right now, they are stamping the carpet under my desk.

Because I hate this.

I have a story I wrote last summer, yes, just last summer, and while I'd love to go back and start from scratch, it isn't working. Leslie, you have pegged why way too well. They've moved on. They're way past the beginning and wouldn't go back if you paid them.