As anyone who takes a pen to
paper will tell you, characterization is an integral part of the story. You can
have a mediocre plot, a tried and true plot, and yet still make it come alive
with fascinating characters. Likewise, boring characters can sink a good plot.
Just ask any reader what kept them enthralled in a book and more often than not
they will give you a detailed description of…the characters. What do you
remember most about Romeo and Juliet? The intricacies of the plot – or how
passionate the lovers were for each other? What about the movie Titanic? What
remains fixed in your mind, the fact that the ship sank after striking an
iceberg or the ill-fated love affair between Jack and Rose?
Characters define a story;
they are the backbone of the plot. Everything that happens within the story
depends upon the type of characters that populate it. So the writer owes it to
the reader to give him or her characters they will not forget. Characters that
will live within them long after the last page is read and the book is closed.
Characters that make them want to revisit that book again and again. How? For
me, it is the simple matter of feeling that way about the characters myself.
After all, if I can’t feel passionate about my characters, how can I expect my
readers to? And so I listen to my characters.
For me, listening to the way
they speak, the words they use, is an integral part of characterization. That
is how I “get into” character. I playact in my mind. Visualize the character in
a scene and play with her emotions. It helps to imagine a certain actress
playing the character in a movie, to run the scene in my head like it’s a
filmstrip. How does she sound? How does she stand? What does she look like when
she’s angry? These are all key ingredients to characterization. You have to
think of them as real people, full-bodied and well-developed. When you start
wondering how your character would feel about a certain situation or how she
would handle a certain crisis, then you have done your job. If you can write a
line of dialogue and on a second pass realize that your character would never
say that, or at least not in that way, then you’re totally in synch with your character
and are one step closer to remaining true to them.
At this point, you might be
thinking that’s all well and good, but how do you get so in tune with your
characters? Another good tool that I use, in addition to the filmstripping, is
the character interview. This is a fun and cool exercise for the writer because
we never know just what our characters are going to say until we ask the
questions.
Why not try it for yourself?
You just never know what you might learn when you open up your mind to the voices
in your head.
Sloane Wold Book Blurb
For
more than a hundred and fifty years, the gray wolf has failed to roam the hills
of Massachusetts, leading to the belief that they are extinct. But with a
spattering of sightings across the Berkshires, the legend of the gray wolf
comes to fruition. The product of that legend, Micah Sloane will go to great
lengths to protect his kind from the threat of outsiders, who seek to exploit
the legend for their own interests. One thing he didn’t count on, however, was
finding his soul mate in the company of such men.
From
the first time she predicted a stranger’s imminent death when she was little
more than a child, Shiloh Beck knew she was different. Wishing to cultivate her
gift, her parents made the fateful decision to enroll her in a private school
for paranormally gifted children. Unbeknownst to them, the school was just a
front for a research facility simply called the Institute, whose secret board
members weaned gifted children from their families to exploit their gifts.
Shiloh has spent the better part of her life trying to escape the Institute and
reunite with the family she was told had abandoned her.
From
their first meeting, Micah and Shiloh share a connection that goes beyond the
normal to bond them in a way that love alone cannot. But before they can build
a life together, they must deal with the fall-out when the legend of the wolves
collides with the men behind the Institute.
More About the Author:
Margay Leah Justice is the author of Sloane Wolf, published by MuseitUpPublishing Publishing. To learn more about the author, visit her at:
1 comment:
Thank you so much for having me here today!
Post a Comment