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Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Character Building: Learning To Mold Your Creations In Ways That Spark Intrigue

We all have our favorite heroes, villains, cartoons, leaders, parents, and gurus. Some of them happen to be fictitious and some of them happen to be real. In this message to all the hungry writers out there, I am going to touch on what traits make characters popular and methods to make them both believable and unique. As with any of my work, to fully grasp the scope of my advice; You must let go of anything related to a rule or belief. At least for a little while...

Regardless of what type of character you want to create, you must practice patience when introducing them to your audience. If you just blurt out all their characteristics in one chapter then it becomes too much for your reader to take in and inside the next couple chapters they will become uninterested because they find your characters to be too predictable and boring. Take your time. Tease your readers. Give them the physical traits enough to where it draws a picture in their mind but leave a few things to the imagination. This is especially true if you are writing a series where the character will be reoccurring. Leave some details in waiting until the perfect surprise scene comes that is just right to wow your audience.

Another equally important aspect to remember is that almost everyone wants to feel like they know their characters closely. Their words must pull the reader into their world, making every street they turn down and every enemy they fight seem as if they are in danger as well. This requires keeping boundaries infinite in your thoughts as you write. If you impose any predispositions to your beliefs then it is sure to hinder your story. Capturing your readers attention with every sentence as best you can, making them take the book into the bathroom with them and staying up hours and being late for work is what any successful author instills in their fan base.

In terms of personality, it is important to exacerbate their traits and make them stand out in unique ways. Add in mannerisms that add extra poignancy to their minds. If your character is evil then make them have a hobby that disgusts the reader and create malice within your fans. Make a victim so shockingly vulnerable and lovable that when they fall prey to your villain that a sincere sense of loss is birthed in the minds of your fans.


                                                                           If your character is a hero then make them have a life that oozes peace and justice in all they do. You don't have to form a new superhero to make them loved. You simply have to make all their actions and words compliment the story you are telling and create a sense of compassion and make your readers wish the character was a real life person. It doesn't matter if they are children, teens, adults, or senior citizens; Heroes, or villains for that matter, need to be introduced over time and their deeds done in ways that build tension and make the reader wonder what they are going to do next.

For characters that are not central to your story, it is good to focus on their appearance or make one specific trait stand out above all the rest of them. This makes them memorable without clouding the rest of the story with questions or details that make it feel that something is missing by the time the book is over. There are exceptions of course. Such as in mysteries or crime novels, it is important to have other characters who are candidates as suspects for the crimes or scenes in question. Even then it is good to give them a trait which makes them memorable without the need to keep them in constant interaction with central characters.

From a twitchy wink in an alluring femme fatales' eyes to a nefarious love for collecting children's fingernails; Building characters in your story should always be the number one focus of your writing endeavor. Without them, the story is but a scene without words. A world without personality. Remember that when your fans want to marry your superhero or slowly torture your villain it makes them come back for more and tell their friends about the book they just read and threw against the wall multiple times because they couldn't believe what they just read.

By Christopher Storm
-aka- "The Stormcaller"

Post Script: If you enjoy my work and want to learn more about the growing interest in global corruption and the problems that affect us now as well as the threats that will affect our children in the future then check out my other blog, Stormcalling.

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