Skip to main content

Adding Flesh to Bones: Character Creation in Fiction

Here you have your great story idea. You have it in your head how it is supposed to go and where its happening. You are set for that million-seller, award winning novel. Now you just have to get it down on paper, or word processor. Boom! You get to writing and the first character comes up. Your face gets that blank look to it and your enthusiasm fades. Who is this person? Where is he from? Do you have any background on him? How did he get to here? EEEEEEK! I will tell you this, sometimes, most of the time, you are not writing about a story. You are writing about a character, or several. Sometimes the character is so obvious that creation is easy. Joe Shmo is a mechanic who wins the lottery, or Jane Whatsherface moves to the beach into an old lighthouse. But is it this easy every time? Not on your life! 
If you go into your story without some sort of idea about your characters, it is like going cross-country driving without ever opening a map. The journey is slow and arduous. There will be times where you forget that you had said he had blue eyes and in later chapters say they are green. A good plan of the characters themselves is always a good idea. You have the perfect story, but the story is just the skeleton, the bones. Now to put flesh on them bones, you need characters worthy to be put into your story (award winning, remember?). 
Names fail to come to me when I don't think of the characters as people. Yes, I know they are make believe, but when you write about them, they come to life, don't they? Have you ever read a book where the characters seemed as flat as the pages they were written on? 
YOU HAVE THE POWER!
You made this world. Give the characters life. Think of them as living, breathing beings that will jump off the pages at any time. You have the power to do this. If you aren't interested in these characters, what makes you think that readers will? Its in your hands. Make notes, describe to yourself each and every character. Then write. Some characters will just pop out out of the blue and thats OK. Your in your flow by then. Create at will and enjoy your little creations. Allow yourself to get mad at them, cry with them and even get scared for them. You now have flesh on bone that you have brought to life on your own, and that makes you a writer...or a mad scientist...I am still thinking on that one.

Comments

  1. So true, Lottie. Knowing your characters is one of the best ways to avoid the dread of the blank page. :D

    ReplyDelete
  2. I still hear my characters in my head sometimes. I think they want to go out on another adventure. We will see...
    Thank you for the comment. It means a lot to me.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I still hear my characters in my head sometimes. I think they want to go out on another adventure. We will see...
    Thank you for the comment. It means a lot to me.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

My 10 Quick Tips on Writing

Hello, my fellow aspiring writers, poets and playwrights! First I want to thank all of you for the incredible support that you have given me in my writing and blogging. I have been writing most of my life but only recently decided to go pro. Many of you have decided the same thing. It's a rough road but we can take it. We are tough. It is always helpful (at least it is to me) when others with more experience or just some good ideas share what they know with the rest of us, so here I go with my little bit. Here are 10 quick tips on writing that I have found to be really helpful to learn. 1. Write like a demon! Ignore the format of the page, all of the little writing rules and every bit of writing tips you have been forced to swallow and just write! Let the words flow out like a busted fire hydrant. That first draft is the most important, even with its type-o's, grammar snaffoos and plot holes. It is the heart of any writing process and you can't let over thi

Free Peek at Balance on the Terra

I hope you enjoy this excerpt from my book, Balance on the Terra. Let me know what you think. At the beginning of Time, there were many Gods of different sorts and degrees of importance. They each had phenomenal powers, and all had fascinations of one kind or another. One had a love for the water and placed water sources that moved and flowed on the Terra, while another had a 'green thumb,' as it were, and filled as many areas with plants and trees as she could, creating her own garden to tend. This was the same for all of the gods. While others would obsess over their interests, there were some that took their time and leisure to let their diversions flourish on their own while the god would watch it, like a child would watch a spinning top. It was this way when the Creator of Time was given free reign over the Terra. Anything that his imagination could see walking, crawling, swimming, or flying was created with joy. However, he realized that while each one of the creations