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Writing Excuses 13.9: Quick Characterization
 
 
Key points: Quick tips for characterizing side characters? Give them something weird and memorable, something in conflict with the reader's expectations. Also something that conflicts with the POV character's expectations. Or use the tricks people use to remember names, e.g. alliteration. To make a character come to life, write a brief scene or piece from their viewpoint. Play two truths and a lie with your characters! Beware of turning characters into a single quirk, a.k.a. Flanderization. Figure out what makes the character do that thing, then pay attention to how that motivates other things. Use peekaboo moments, add a splash of color to a scene highlighting something unusual about this side character. A juggling guard? Just a momentary glimpse of the motivations and passions of the side characters. To quickly introduce characters, have the characters, justifiably, talk about each other. Beware of overdoing quick characterization of side characters! Finally, make sure that the side characters are doing something when the protagonist walks on stage.
 
Rounding out the flat side characters... )
[Brandon] This is Writing Excuses, Quick Characterization.
[Mary] 15 minutes long.
[Dan] Because you're in a hurry.
[Howard] And we're not that smart.
[Brandon] I'm Brandon.
[Mary] I'm Mary.
[Dan] I'm Dan.
[Howard] I'm Howard.
 
[Brandon] We are talking all this month about side characters. It's a topic we've touched on before on Writing Excuses, so I want to dig into something specific about side characters this week. I want to talk about how we characterize people quickly. Because sometimes, you just don't have a lot of space to dedicate to these side characters. So let's say you only have a couple sentences to characterize someone. Dan, how do you go about doing it?
[Dan] Kind of the cheap and dirty hack that I use is just to give them something that is, in my opinion, unexpected. Based on what their role is or what their situation is in the story, I will throw something else weird on top of that so that you'll remember, "Oh, yeah, this is that kid, but also he really likes this one strange thing."
[Brandon] Right. They put them in conflict with the reader's expectations. It's a really good way to make someone memorable.
[Mary] One of the things that I try to do, actually, is that thing, except not just the reader's expectations, but the point of view character's expectations. I… Because using that allows me to kind of slide past some of the I am telling you what this character looks like. It also allows me to then convey information about my main character, which, when I'm writing short fiction, I have to be able to get every sentence to do double duty. One of the sneaky tricks that I will use sometimes is I will use some of the tools that people use to remember names in real life. Which is… If the character says their name, I will slide a detail in that is alliterative without…
[Brandon] Wow!
[Dan] Without calling attention to it?
[Brandon] That's interesting.
[Mary] Yeah. Monty with the mustache.
[Unsure] [inaudible now]
[Brandon] Oh.
[Dan] So, like an example?
[Mary] Monty with the mustache.
[Dan] Monty with a mustache. Okay. Awesome.
[Mary] I mean…
[Howard] Howard with the hairless…
[Laughter]
[Mary] Hairless Howard. I get… And there are other memory palace kinds of things that you can do with that, too. So…
[Brandon] Right. Make the guy named Jim a butcher.
[Mary] Yeah.
[Laughter]
[Mary] Actually, that would totally work. So, I was… I'm terrible with remembering names. That's when I meeting someone in real life. So I was taking a class on how to remember names… It doesn't help me actually that much. It's a little better. But I suddenly realized that these were all very useful tools for cementing a name with a reader. So… If I have a character who is a jeweler, then I will… One of the details that all call attention to is the earrings that are hanging from her pendulous earlobes…
[Brandon] Nice.
[Mary] If I have named her Patricia, pendulous…
[Howard] Pendularia…
[Laughter]
[Mary] Yeah. Penny. That is a very sneaky… I do not deploy that all the time, but that is a trick that works distressingly well.
[Chuckles]
[Howard] I think I got better with side characters once… And this is kind of coming back to the name thing. Once I realized that I wasn't good with names, and I wanted to be, so I started practicing any time I was in public. I learned the names of all the people working the line at the place where I got salads. In the course of doing that, they always gave me the best strawberries. Because I was the guy who came in and knew everybody's names. But in the course of learning their names… They were all wearing identical clothing. They're all working this salad line. But in the course of learning their names, I forced myself to remember some of these details. I taught my brain that this is important. So I started retaining that information. It's fascinating that the two seem to be related. If… I will often see in movies, when I can't tell two side characters apart, I know they've done it wrong. Because I'm pretty good at tracking those things, and if I can't tell, then it's just… It's not been done right.
[Brandon] So…
[Dan] Well…
[Brandon] Go ahead, Dan.
[Dan] The… One counterexample being something like Crabbe and Goyle from Harry Potter, who are supposed to be interchangeably faceless.
 
[Brandon] How do you characterize people without viewpoints? Let me explain this. I find it, as a writer, really easy if I give myself a brief viewpoint through someone's eyes to dig into their back story, to kind of discovery write…
[Mary] Luxury!
[Brandon] Who they are, right? And just suddenly they come to life. If I don't have a viewpoint, then I have a lot of trouble with that. It's like…
[Mary] I will go ahead, sometimes, even when I'm doing short fiction, I will go ahead and do a little bit of an exploratory scenelette thing from the other character's point of view. Usually the same scene that I'm writing. Especially if I've got a character that is being very flat, which still happens sometimes. It's just you're not getting traction on them. So I'll do exactly that. I'll write that scene from their point of view, which helped me figure out what their motivations are, and some of the physical… The body language that they're going to be using. Then I'll flip back to my main character, do the scene again, incorporating the information that I've learned. Which will often… I don't do that every time, but it's a very useful exercise to engage in sometimes.
[Brandon] I've seen you do something similar.
[Dan] Yeah. So the thing that I do, all the time… And this is… This is such a dumb little thing. I will play two truths and a lie with my characters. Because then I get to know things about them, and I get to know what kinds of things they would lie about. It's fascinating. I've done it with… I think at this point, all of my young adult series. The one I'm writing right now, I actually put a scene into the book because I find it so interesting. But just to watch them tell truths and tell lies. Inevitably, I'll have one character that tries to cheat. It just tells me a lot about who they are, very quickly.
[Mary] I want to point something out that you said about what are the things that they would lie about and why would they lie about them? I think that when we have characters who wind up dropping into being just a single quirk, then I think one of the reasons that that happens is because we've thought, "Oh, I'm going to do that quirk. I'm going to give him this quirky thing." That the flanderization…
 
[Brandon] Right. We'll talk about flanderization in a minute. We can just dig into it right now. Why don't you tell us what flanderization is?
[Mary] So, flanderization is referring to the slow evolution of a character into just being a quirk. It relates to what happened to the character Flanders on The Simpsons. That he started out as being this very rounded character, and then eventually became a single joke.
[Brandon] Because when people saw him come on the screen, they all wanted him to do his thing. So he did his thing, and the writers all just had him do his thing. Then he stopped being a person, and started being a quirk.
[Mary] So, I think one of the things that you can do to keep that from happening is figure out why your character does that thing. Then, only deploy it when the triggers happen. If you want them to do it, then you have to give them the trigger, and the trigger then has to be coherent to the rest of the story. It also makes the character more rounded, because you… Whatever reason they have to do that thing, that same reason is going to motivate a lot of other different choices.
[Brandon] Month, we're going to dig into this kind of idea really deeply. We'll do an entire podcast on the idea of characters who are self-contradictory, or characters who wear different hats in different social situations and act differently in those social situations.
[Mary] Spoiler alert!
[Brandon] We will dig…
[Mary] Everyone does.
[Laughter]
[Brandon] Into this a lot.
 
[Brandon] Let's go ahead and stop for our book of the week. You are actually going to tell us about Brimstone.
[Mary] Yes. Brimstone by Cherie Priest is fantastic. It is a story set right after the 1st World War. There are two main characters. The… One of them is a young woman who is a medium. She has traveled to this new small town to learn how to use her powers. It's a real town that really had a spiritualist movement in it, and still does. The other character is a man who survived the war and has come back with a ghost. But he doesn't realize he has a ghost. Things just keep catching on fire. It's their interaction and figuring out what it is that is haunting him and has come back with him from the war. The characterization in this is so rich. It's a huge cast, because she's in this small town, filled with spiritualists that she's meeting. There's… It's this very huge community. Each character feels distinct and individual. Even ones that are on stage just for a few moments. It's… Even the ones who actually never come on stage, because they're dead already.
[Chuckles]
[Mary] It's wonderful storytelling. It's…
[Brandon] Brimstone.
[Mary] Brimstone.
[Brandon] By Cherie Priest.
[Mary] By Cherie Priest.
[Dan] And if you've never read Cherie Priest, she's one of the few writers who can hook me from the very first sentence of a book. The just… The writing itself, the language is incredible.
[Mary] It's written in an epistolary form so that each character is… That what you're reading are there journals.
[Yeah!]
 
[Brandon] So one of the things I've learned over the years for characterizing side characters in specific, doing things quickly, is what I call peekaboo moments. It's a measure of great gratification to me as a writer when occasionally someone will come up and say, "Oh, this little side character just came to life for me." Almost always it somebody I've done one of these peekaboo moments, where you are writing a story. In general, you'll describe the scene and then focus in on the main characters and have the conversation or the conflict and things like this. Everything else fades to background, even some of the side characters who are coming in and interacting with them. What I like to do is occasionally say, "No, we're going to add a splash of color to this specific scene, to this specific person. We're going to fade them from the black-and-white background into the characters paying attention to them, saying, 'Oh. This person wasn't what I thought they were.'" This guard, who's standing guard at the door, isn't the person I thought they were. They are, between… While they're waiting, they're standing there juggling or something like this. What I tried to do in these peekaboo moments is show a moment of humanity and back story and passion from somebody who's not related to the main story at all, just so that you get a glimpse that hey, all these people populating this world have their own motivations and their own passions. I find that the occasional use of one of these can really add a lot of vividness to your story. Or using them with a character who's often in the scene, but is never the main character. The reader will take that character and take that image of them and bring it to the next scenes where they're going to be like, "Oh, yeah. This is the person who has twin daughters and is always on the lookout for two copies of things, because they like to give it to their twin daughters." I don't know. Something like that, that human… Gives humanity to the background characters.
[Dan] There's a… One of my favorite movies is Brick by Ryan Johnson. Which is a… Basically a film noir, but set in a modern high school. As much as I love it, I could not tell you who any of the side characters are, except for one drug dealer, who pauses somewhere around the second act break and gives a little monologue about how much he likes the Lord of the Rings books. He's such a beautiful character, because of that moment. It's amazing how much richness that adds.
 
[Howard] One of the tricks that I use is having the characters, justifiably, talk about each other. The 18th… 18th, good Lord!… Schlock Mercenary book, one of the opening scenes, the company's about to take a job, and our protagonist is talking to her sister. Her sister's saying, "You know, I need medical help." She's like, "I'm not a doctor. Why are you calling me?" "You work for a mercenary company. You got battlefield medics, don't you?" "Well, yeah, our doctor. I guess she's okay. But our battlefield medic is like a walking cutlery station." Then we have the battlefield medic show up behind her and say, "Saved your life." Schlock says, "She also hears really well."
[Laughter]
[Howard] Now we have, in two panels, insight into five characters. Okay, it helps that I'm able to illustrate them, so some of this context is…
[Luxury! Chuckles]
[Howard] But the… I did it specifically. I've got a spreadsheet for this. I did it because I knew these characters are all going to be critical to this story, and I need to introduce the reader to them early in a way that is memorable.
[Brandon] But doesn't take a lot of panel space.
[Howard] But doesn't take a lot of panels. Yeah. It took two panels. And while this is happening, we are moving the story forward by establishing why this job is going to make sense for the company to take.
 
[Brandon] There are some books out there, and I was going to give the kind of warning, that you can't do this too much in most books. If every scene, you're spending a paragraph on five different side characters, then suddenly the point of quickly characterizing…
[Mary] A paragraph!
[Brandon] Yeah.
[Laughter]
[Brandon] But there are some books that this is kind of the way the book is. We've recommended the Gollum and the Jinn.. the Genie... The Gollum and the…
[Mary] Jinni.
[Brandon] The Gollum and the Djinni on the podcast before. I read that because you guys recommended it.
[Mary] [inaudible]
[Brandon] It is a story mostly about the side characters. On this page, you will spend three pages on this side character. On this one, you'll… They just kind of are there, populating the story and constantly interacting with the main characters. But the main characters are almost there as an excuse to explore entire community… [cough] Excuse me.
[Mary] I think one of the reasons it works in that book is because everything is new to the main characters. So that's one of the reasons that it works, is because of the POV focus on who is this interesting person that I've encountered that is unlike anything that I've ever seen, living in a glass bottle for a thousand years. So this is… There are many other books that do that where I think it does not work, it's not compelling and engaging.
[Brandon] I would agree.
 
[Mary] Can I offer one other trick? Think about… One of the things that I will do sometimes is think about where the character was or what they were doing before the protagonist walked on stage. Because I think one of the things that will make a character seem flat is when they have just been waiting for the main character to appear. So, it's… You don't even have to give the character a name or anything like that, but if my main character walks in and the clerk behind the counter wiped mustard off her mouth and then smiled brightly. "Can I help you?" That character already feels more real and compelling than just…
[Brandon] That's a really good tip.
 
[Brandon] I think we're out of time. Howard, though, you've got a cool thing that cartoonists use.
[Howard] Oh, yeah. The silhouette test. It's not… Cartoonists, comic book writers, anybody who's working in sequential art where there are characters.
[Mary] And puppeteers.
[Howard] Yes. Puppeteers. If you're going to keep these characters straight, they have to be able to pass the silhouette test. Which is where all of the details of the characters are removed, all you can see is the outline, or all you can see is the filled outline, just the silhouette. If you can't tell them apart, something has to change. I… I have… I ask myself this all the time. What is the prose equivalent for the silhouette test? What I've kind of boiled it down to is the adverbs and adjectives that I will so rarely let myself use when I'm describing characters. Which are the ones that I would only use on character A and would never use on character B? Just make a quick list of those adjectives and adverbs. Once I have those, when I am writing the characters, those adjectives and adverbs need to disappear. Because you expand them out into other things.
[Brandon] So your homework…
[Howard] Come up with those.
[Brandon] Is to come up with those. Yeah, you don't necessarily want to always describe somebody who comes on scene as greasy. But if on one scene, they're the person who's always eating a big hamburger and dropping bits of it to they… To their jeans, then that image you can use repeatedly.
[Howard] So, the homework. Take your cast of characters, and make their adjective/adverb list, so that, in terms of those words, they are passing the silhouette test for you.
[Brandon] That's great. This has been Writing Excuses. You're out of excuses, now go write.
 
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Writing Excuses 13.8: Making Characters Distinctive

From http://www.writingexcuses.com/2018/02/25/13-8-making-characters-distinctive/

Key points: How do you make your characters flawed? Start with the characteristics you expect, the stereotypical stuff, for your protagonist or character. Flaws, or quirks, come from things that don't match that. Think about the character's situation, how does that affect their dialogue, actions, and thinking. Give your characters something to get in their way, and add texture. Look for try-fail cycles where the protagonist fails because their competency is not what they need to succeed. What flaw can they have that is important to the story? Do you use a tragic flaw, that causes the character's downfall, or just weird flaws that the character is constantly fighting? Tragic flaws are good when you want things to go horribly wrong. Think about flaws that can go either way. Use an ensemble cast to practice and play with flaws. Distinctions are not necessarily flaws. Look at Sanderson's second law of magic, what a character can't do is more interesting than what they can do. When you are creating distinctive characters, the flaws help! Sometimes flaws are what make characters lovable. How do you avoid just stapling a quirk to a character? Look for the things that are important to that character. Look at what's behind that quirk, what's the explanation for it. Find things in the environment or setting that differentiate this person from everyone else.

Flaws, quirks, how is this distinctive? )

[Brandon] We are out of time. This is been a great discussion. Howard has our homework.
[Howard] Okay. We are talking about distinctive, distinctiveness, failings, quirky, whatever. Make a shortlist of five of the people you know best. They can be family members, they can be friends. Include yourself in that list. Imagine them as characters in a story. Then, next to their name, start writing the attributes that make them distinct from each other. The things that might be failings, the things that might be quirky, the things that might be weird. Include the things about yourself. Don't show this list to anybody else, because they'll find it highly offensive. You now need to keep this a secret for the rest of your life.
[Brandon] All right. This has been Writing Excuses. You're out of excuses, now go write.

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Writing Excuses 12.44: NaNoWriMo 2017 Primer

From http://www.writingexcuses.com/2017/10/29/12-44-nanowrimo-2017-primer/

Key points: Nanowrimo is a community of people who are all pushing for a goal, giving you a sense of participation, community, and commiseration. It can also push you to up your game, seeing other people turn out words. Look for tools, for word sprints, or roleplaying games with monster writing challenges. Motivators! Nanowrimo can help you learn to be a professional writer, to set goals and get the job done. It teaches you to get the words out. "You can't find those awesome words without writing the crappy ones." You can also do Nanowrimo just for the fun off it. Writing quickly and writing well are two different skills, and Nanowrimo can help you practice and learn to write fast. Nanowrimo is a tool to help you be a better writer. It's one way to learn that you can write 50,000 words in a month. 
Here comes Nanowrimo! )

[Brandon] We're out of time. With that… On that wonderful note, you guys… Your homework is to find a way to use Nanowrimo to your advantage. Set some goals this month. Some writing goals. It doesn't actually have to be the 50,000 words. It can be whatever is going to fit your schedule. But I want you to push yourself. And I want you…
[Howard] Use this month to make words that you would not have made otherwise.
[Brandon] That's right. That, simply, is your homework. This has been Writing Excuses. You're out of excuses. Now go write.

[identity profile] mbarker.livejournal.com
Writing Excuses 11.13: Elemental Idea Q&A

From http://www.writingexcuses.com/2016/03/27/11-13-elemental-idea-qa/

 Q&A Summary:
Q: How do you keep obstacles in an idea story from feeling just like a boring lock that's waiting for the idea to unlock?
A: Good ideas for books are magnet ideas, that attract more and more ideas.
Q: I have a great idea for a story, but I'm not sure how to tie my character motivation to it. Any advice on how to connect characters to a great idea?
A: Start with the geewhiz idea. Figure out where it takes place. Then look at the character and question all the MICE possibilities. Brainstorm them all. What about the environment could cuase problems? What do they wonder about the idea? What challenges their self-image about the idea? What could go wrong? Finally, consider what motivates the character, and what's at stake, what will they lose if they fail?
Q: You've got an idea, but you're struggling to really flesh it out and dig deeply into it. My biggest fear is that I will do this idea, but I won't extrapolate far enough, and the reader will just feel that it's full of untapped potential. What advice do you have for a writer?
A: If the story is good and engaging, untapped potential is a feature! That's for the next book. But in short stories, readers expect you to leave things out, while in novels, they may assume you hadn't thought about it and missed it. If it fascinates you, let it grow and see where it goes. Brainstorm, especially why and what is the effect. Is it a dragon with a magic sword or a monkey with a propeller hat? Sometimes you have to keep reading, keep writing, and keep living until you can write what you want to write. Trust yourself.
Q: Is it possible to make every idea story viable, or are there just some that you have to give up on?
A: Sometimes an idea is problematic and damaging. But some people never give up on one, because if they give up on one, they will give up on them all. Sometimes you're not ready to make an idea work. If it doesn't seem viable, maybe the story is flawed. Go back to the beginning and think about it again.
Q: How do you avoid using too many ideas at once? Is there such a thing as idea clutter in an idea story?
A: Not too many ideas. You can have the wrong ideas. Beware the gorilla in the phone booth, a throwaway line that is cooler than what the character is focused on. Watch for too many ideas for the length of the story you are telling. Don't hold back on your cool ideas, you will not run out of them.

When you've picked your idea, what happens next? )

[Brandon] I'm afraid that we are out of time. Unfortunately, I'm sorry that we didn't get to all your questions. Mary has some homework for us.
[Mary] All right. So last week, Nancy gave us a homework assignment in which you were supposed to brainstorm about 20 different ideas. What I want you to do is I want you to pick your favorite of those ideas. Take that idea and then start thinking about consequences and reasons. I want you to basically look at it and go what-if and why. I want you to work in opposite directions. So I want you to go why as far back... I want you to go back 10 steps of why. And I want you to go forward 10 steps of what-if.
[Brandon] Maybe go back last year and listen to the podcast we did on brainstorming during Season 10's Master Class. Thank you so much, Shannon, for joining us.
[Shannon] My pleasure.
[Brandon] Thank you to the audience here at Life, the Universe, and Everything.
[Whoo! Applause and whistles.]
[Brandon] This has been Writing Excuses. You're out of excuses, now go write.
 
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Writing Excuses 11.4: Newton's Laws of Writing

From http://www.writingexcuses.com/2016/01/24/11-04-newtons-laws-of-writing/

Key points: Tayler's Three Laws of Writing. [1] A word count at rest tends to remain at rest, while a word count in motion tends to remain in motion. Motivation? To keep writing, write some more! To start writing, start slow, then bump your goal. Build your writing inertia by writing every day! Oh, at the end of a session, don't stop at the end of a chapter. Write the first page of the next scene, and then pick up with that jumpstart. Dan it all! Don't sweat the zone -- fight to make the most of each chance, and make sure people understand don't interrupt me! Think before you start writing, don't waste time ramping up. [2] Word count equals motivation times focus. Motivate by thinking about what comes next. Focus BICHOK and clear distractions. Consider word count per hour. Try a timer (sand timers don't beep!). Meditation might be your ticket to a clearer mind? [3] For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. When you write words, the words write you. You also are affected. Writing is its own reward. Every word you write builds your writing skill. The goal of writing stories is to become a better writer. The equal and opposite reaction to writing is that you become a better writer!
Three Laws of Writing in Motion? )[Brandon] Now, we are out of time on this episode. I'm going to give you a writing prompt. It's going to actually be a classic writing prompt. One of these ideas that popped into my head and I was on the cruise, and that I was actually pretty excited about. So maybe someday I'll write it. They were talking about art auctions, and it just sent me down this weird spiraling path to thinking about, "You know, it would be kind of smart to take artists, buy up all their paintings, and then murder them so that the art spiked in value."
[Howard] Nice.
[Brandon] So the story somehow is about somebody who is a serial killer of artists, specifically in order to bump the value of all that art up and try to make money. This has been Writing Excuses. You're out of excuses, now go write. Please don't kill any artists.
[identity profile] mbarker.livejournal.com
Writing Excuses 7.11: More Microcasting

From http://www.writingexcuses.com/2012/03/11/writing-excuses-7-11-more-microcasting/

Key Points:

1. Should you mix genres or not?
2. How do you avoid world builder's disease?
3. Tips for nanowrimo?
4. Before getting published, how do you get followers to your website or blog?
5. How do you create subplots?
6. What did you learn last year?
7. How do you stay motivated?
microcasting is like miniature incantations? )
[Brandon] So it was Bill Housely on twitter. He says, "A lone woman who runs an orbital refueling port makes first contact when some desperate aliens stop by for fuel."
[Dan] Awesome.
[Brandon] That's a great writing prompt.
[Dan] Bill Housely, you're our favorite listener, today.
[Brandon] So that's your writing prompt. Go for it. Thank you all. You're out of excuses, now go write.
[identity profile] mbarker.livejournal.com
Writing Excuses 7.1: When Good Characters Go Bad

From http://www.writingexcuses.com/2012/01/01/writing-excuses-7-1-when-good-characters-go-bad/

Key Points: Why? Character change -- redemption or falling -- interests us! Also, fall and realization is cathartic. Plus, this can set up concern for the other characters. To start, show us their starting state, normal and good, and the choice that starts them down the path. Motivation and slippery slope. Dividing line or shades of gray? Don't tell the reader where the line is, let them decide. Does the character think they have crossed the line? Have they slowly eased over it, or been pushed to the edge and snapped? Does the gradual slip have a moment of realization? What about realizing that the rules, the code, itself is wrong? Consider the tragic flaw, and the archetype of the hero who falls from grace. Is this an Everyman falling? Remember that even villains are heroes of their own story. Make sure your character is motivated, and that the fall is foreshadowed. Use that anticipation.
Who knows what evil lurks in the hearts of men? )
[Howard] Perfect. You know what, I'm just going to build this off of the last comment I made. Come up with a list of three things that are very, very important to your main character that are all in alignment. Now, outline yourself some circumstances where one of those things is now out of alignment and can drive your character from the protagonist's side into darkness and eventual oblivion.
[Brandon] All right. This has been Writing Excuses. You're out of excuses, now go write.
[identity profile] mbarker.livejournal.com
Writing Excuses 6.25; When Characters Do Dumb Things

From http://www.writingexcuses.com/2011/11/20/writing-excuses-6-25-when-characters-do-dumb-things/

Key points: Don't just make character do dumb things because the plot requires it, because then readers disengage from the character. Let the audience have information that the character doesn't, but don't let the reader get it too far ahead of the character! Dumb choices should make sense as far as the character knows -- even if the reader wants to let them know that there is something else they need to know. Dumb choices may be personality based, a character flaw, or driven by emotion. Pay attention to the consequences -- really dumb choices should have strong consequences. Avoid plotting that requires a character be stupid. Dumb choices often are dumb because you didn't lay the groundwork. Give your characters good reasons for their choices.
Try the yellow pages? )
[Brandon] I'm going to go ahead and do our writing prompt because I've been gone for so long from the podcast. I'm going to suggest that you actually create a really solid romance where the characters can't be together for good, character-driven reasons. Not because of a misunderstanding. Not because they have an argument in act one and then hold a grudge. But because of legitimate, either cultural biases or character biases. Write a story about that romance where in the end they don't get together.
[Howard] And not because one of them is dead?
[Brandon] And not because one of them is dead, and not because either ot them are stupid. This has been Writing Excuses. You're out of excuses, now go write.
[identity profile] mbarker.livejournal.com
Writing Excuses 6.2: Internal Motivations

From http://www.writingexcuses.com/2011/06/12/writing-excuses-6-2-internal-motivations/

Key points: Character motivation has two aspects: what does the character want? How is that expressed on the page? What the character wants includes their big overall goal, what they need to do to reach that goal, and what do they want to do it immediately right now. Beware caricature and wild shifting. Play immediate needs against overarching goals. Let motivations shift in response to what's happening. One way to express motivation: throw in a thought. Let the reader see what is happening filtered through the character. Be sparing, and establish character well before you need it. "When a character makes a significant action or decision, the reader wants to have all the pieces already so that they can know exactly why the character did that." [Dan] Brandon's advice: use the thought, young writer. But don't overdo it. The descriptive words a character uses can help. Also, consider all five senses. Let another character point out changes. Just make sure you set it up well before you need it.
lots of motivation )
[Brandon] All right. Mary. I'm going to make you give us a writing prompt.
[Mary] So, writing prompt. Come up with a character motivation. Then, with an action that they need to take that is counter to the motivation.
[Brandon] Excellent. All right...
[probably cut due to time constraints... This has been Writing Excuses. You're out of excuses, now go write.]
[identity profile] mbarker.livejournal.com
Writing Excuses 5.11: Micro-Casting Number Two

From http://www.writingexcuses.com/2010/11/14/writing-excuses-5-11-micropocasting-2/

Key points:
-- How do you do bad things to your hero character without feeling bad about it?
I do feel their pain.
-- How far into writing a novel should you begin letting others read it for feedback?
When you are finished with the story. Beware of story hijacking.
-- Do the bad things you do to your characters always have to suit the story?
They need to be motivated and properly set up.
-- How do you design frightening monsters?
Take away the eyebrows. Let them do mundane, real things. Keep them in the shadows.
-- How far into the outlining process do you actually start writing?
When I am excited and want to start writing. When I have a good sense of where the story is going, where it needs to end, and more or less how it needs to get there. When it's done.
And lots more words... )
[Brandon] All right. Well. Let's go ahead and go with our writing prompt. I'm going to say Howard, give it to us.
[Howard] You, in an extremely, extremely spur-of-the-moment sort of living-in-the-moment thing have decided that instead of fight club, it's zoo club. And you have just punched an elephant. Hard. What happens next?
[Dan] You get arrested.
[Brandon] All right. This has been Writing Excuses, you're out of excuses...
[Howard] Now go to jail.
[identity profile] mbarker.livejournal.com
Writing Excuses Season Four Episode Five: Role-playing in games as a tool for storytelling

From http://www.writingexcuses.com/2010/02/07/writing-excuses-4-5-roleplaying-games-as-a-tool-for-story-telling/

Key points: Role-playing as a player can help writers understand character motivations. It can help writers learn to wing it. It can teach writers to look for different, clever, non-obvious ways to solve problems. It can help provide a "test environment" for ideas. But beware! Role-playing can be so much fun and addictive that you aren't writing. Also, beware of trying to copy a great role-playing session or game directly into a novel. Role-playing characters, tone, etc. are not always appropriate for a novel. Remember, role-playing games are for fun. Novels need realism.
roll for revelation? )
[Brandon] There have been plenty of  "you get suck... players get sucked into their role-playing game" sort of books. Guardians of the Flame by Joel Rosenberg did this. It's kind of become a cliche in fantasy. So you're not going to do that. You're going to have role-playing characters get sucked out into our world, and see what happens.
[Dan] Very nice.
[Howard] Roll for initiative.
[Brandon] This has been Writing Excuses. You're out of excuses, now go write. Or play. Whichever you want to do.
[identity profile] mbarker.livejournal.com
Writing Excuses Episode 33: Side Characters

http://www.writingexcuses.com/2008/09/22/writing-excuses-episode-33-side-characters/

Key points: Give your side characters their own voice, sensible motivation, and unique aspects. Give them a good motivation and make them the center of their own story. If they are too interesting, promote them to a main character or cut them out.
The Meatloaf )
Writing Prompt [confusion over how to take a side character without having written a main character results in Brandon suggesting]:
  • Brandon: take a side character from the future, bring them back into the past, and write a story about them.
Howard: thank you, and goodnight kids.
[identity profile] mbarker.livejournal.com
Writing Excuses Episode 27: World-Building Religion

[Note: this is not about a religion building a world, this is about writers who are building a fictional world and the role of religion in that. Just in case anyone is having trouble parsing the title. Fictional World Building: Religion?]

Key points: what you believe informs your writing, but your story should turn around what your characters believe. Religion belongs in world building because it is a human motivation. Talking about religion may offend some people, but putting pen to paper also may offend some people. Do your world building around sources of conflict. How will you use it in your story?
Details )
Writing prompt: develop a religion where people worship something that no one would ever worship in our world. And it can't be silly.
[identity profile] mbarker.livejournal.com
Writing Excuses 16: BIC HOK

High points:
BIC HOK means put your Butt In the Chair and keep your Hands On the Keyboard.
Figure out what is blocking you -- writers block comes in different flavors.
Figure out what motivates you. Schedule pressure, writing the ending first, whatever it is, use it.
From http://www.writingexcuses.com/2008/05/25/writing-excuses-episode-16-butt-in-chair-hands-on-keyboard/
Notes )
Writing Prompt
Write a story about something unusual stopping a novelist from finishing his or her book.
Back next week.
[identity profile] mbarker.livejournal.com
Writing Excuses #11: The Business of Writing

from http://www.writingexcuses.com/

There will be several podcasts about the business of writing, this one is an introduction to being a business person as a writer.
The details . . .  )
Final Words: What advice do you have for someone going from artist to pro?
  1. Talk it over with your spouse or significant other.
  2. Chase your passion.
  3. Learn the business. It is not just an art.
And that's #11. Next up, a real live editor joins the panel!

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