A scene is a bucket that contains drama. It occupies its own space for a finite amount of time. When time is up, the setup stays while we cut to a new scene. Scenes are great because they talk to you. They'll tell you the highway scene is finished. They'll tell it's time to cut to the empty house.
If we write, we all have a favorite character of all time. Some of us have more than one. You know when you’ve found her.
He will come to you as if in a dream. Or he may arrive fully formed. It will be love at first sight.
How do you go about developing, designing, taming this perfect character? Do you keep notes, physical sketches, does she become a tiny person who sits near your keyboard?
What do you keep in your character notes? Do your characters get their very own files? Do you interview them? How do you keep them alive? How do you come back to your keyboard for the duration of your short story or novel
and keep them fresh and alive and full of surprises?
Wednesday is an open topic night. Bring any writerly questions or ides to the chat room and we will do our best to address them.
I have finally created a new page for the website called A Writer's Bookshelf. I have listed books on writing and linked the items back to Amazon. I am asking for suggestions from all of you. If you have a favorite book on writing or a reference book you return to often, please shoot me an email at Sally@Writerschatroom.com . Include a clear subject line and in the body of the email list the book, author and a link to the book if you have one available. Don't feel limited to a single suggestion, go ahead and send me your list. I will try my best to include them.
We have new visitors at the chat room, they sometimes feel a little lost because of our familiarity, so let's be sure to make them feel at home. Show them to the Potluck Dessert Table at the back of the room.
Discovering New Characters - Continued
Be Prepared to Share Your Favorite How-To Titles and Authors.
Aristotle defined or measured characters as good, appropriate, like and consistent. Forrester compacted these four labels into two. Round and Flat. If a character never surprises the reader it is flat. Burroway suggests we
do away with the starchy labels and “whoever catches your attention may be the beginning of a character.”
Start a character with what you can see. Age, gender, features, gestures and clothing. Find a feeling from the things you observe and then invent a reason this character is wearing these clothes and standing in this place.
Ray suggests adding motives, wants, cast the characters into roles, antagonist, protagonist and helpers, give them snippets of dialog. Write fast and call it a discovery. Don’t fuss over things at the start. Your bad girl
may turn out to be your helper or even your protagonist.
Let your characters develop on the pages of notebooks, sketch pads, character files in e-folders on your desk top computers or your cellphone. Just get it down, somewhere, or you’ll never know your characters well enough to
take you to the end of the story.
Sketch a few characters, then give them back-stories. Let them have dreams, filled with symbolism. Then ask them to show you what they keep in their closets, under their beds. Dress them up. Do anything you want, you are
creating. Round file the flat characters, you’ll know when. Re-cast them in roles, a bad or evil character doesn’t know she is mean and destructive.
Most of the content for this article came from Robert J. Ray.
Join us tonight for a Mini-Topic Chat on Writing New Characters
Be Prepared to Share Your Favorite How-To Titles and Authors.
We are all know if a movie shows a rifle over a fireplace in the opening scene - the item has to be used in the cathartic scene.
I use a writing application called yWriter. A part of the file keeping is a tab to store items. A writer can track when this item shows up or is mentioned in a scene.
Early in the week, I was very curious about Stun Guns. I am thinking of giving one to a character during NaNoWriMo prep. Because I can't go up to a random person and ask to hold her personal stunning weapon, I opened my Amazon page.. for less than $20 and two days I had an actual stun gun to have and to hold.
The whole idea of empowerment by such an accessible and nonlethal self defense weapon feeds right into the thought of a fictional prop as a talisman. So, this will be our Sunday Topic.
By definition, a prop is an object used by an actor in a film (for films) and that can be held. (Understand, a swimming pool is not a prop). They are the seemingly ‘little’ details that will enhance the world your character lives in, making it believable or not and giving layers to your story, or not.
We have a few new members on our email list. I hope you will drop in and say hello at The Writer's Chatroom on Sunday at 7PM EDT. Welcome to our chat room.
The actual Stun Gun in the image is disabled and no one is in danger.