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	<title>Anything Fictional &#187; characters</title>
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	<description>Because fiction is life with the dull bits left out</description>
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		<title>Using Desire to Create Conflict</title>
		<link>http://www.anythingfictional.com/2008/10/using-desire-to-create-conflict/</link>
		<comments>http://www.anythingfictional.com/2008/10/using-desire-to-create-conflict/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 12 Oct 2008 11:56:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Chris</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Writing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[characters]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[conflict]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[desire]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.anythingfictional.com/?p=63</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>Have you ever read a book where the main character doesn’t seem to want anything, or if they do have something they want, they don’t fight to get it? It’s very likely that you would have found that character – and the book as a whole – incredibly lifeless and boring. And if you <em>haven’t</em> read a book like this, it’s likely because these sorts of stories just don’t get published these days.</p>
<p>What we want is a big part of human psychology. What we desire, what we want to achieve in life, is part of what makes us individuals. If everyone wanted to the same thing, there would be nothing interesting about meeting other people, and there would be no place for marketers (ok, so this might make the world a better place.) What we want gives a reason to get up in the morning, gives purpose and meaning to the activities we perform between when we wake up in the morning and go to sleep at night.</p>
<p>In fiction, asking what a character <strong>wants</strong> is the first thing that you need to find out about <em>any</em> character you create, even minor ones which might appear only for a page or two. There are numerous insights you can gain into a character by working out what they desire:</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Why</strong> do they want this? This gets deep into the motivation of the character, and can be used to tease out backstory and other character traits.</li>
<li><strong>What</strong> do they hope this bring to their lives? When people want something, they usually have some vision of how their lives will be better in the future when they get it. Characters need these same imagined futures as well.</li>
<li><strong>How</strong> will they go about fulfilling this desire? Two people with the same goal may find different approaches to achieving it, depending on their values, morals, standards and many other factors. How the character chooses to fulfill their desire will drive the action of the story.</li>
</ul>
<p>Depth of character can be drawn out by giving a character multiple desires, especially if these desires clash with each other. This causes internal conflict and can add shades and personality to an otherwise 2-dimensional or stereotyped character. You get to see who a character really is, how she will juggle both desires and try to achieve both.</p>
<p>Most importantly, characters need to fight to achieve their desires – they need to want what they want. This is the one area where fiction needs to be depart from the real world. It will happen a lot that real people will give up on a desire at the first sign of conflict or hardship. Fictional characters <em>cannot do this</em>. It makes them weak, and really, what’s the point in telling their story. There is a place in fiction for weak characters, but it should never be your main characters.</p>
<p>Knowing what the character desires – and how he will fight to achieve his goals – you now have all the information you need to develop <strong>conflict</strong> in the story. A story where the character gets everything he wants easily is boring. If achieving a goal isn’t a challenge fraught with opposition, competition, dangers, self-doubt and any other road block to success, then it’s attainment is hollow and unsatisfying – for the reader as well as the character. Readers will have a hard time suspending their disbelief if the events conspire to fulfill a character’s desire easily – in most people’s experience, that’s not the way the world works.</p>
<p>Good conflict comes about when one character’s desires clash with those of another.  Maybe they have the same desire – winning a competition, finding the hidden treasure first, winning the heart of the beautiful princess, etc, etc – but only one of them can have it. Conflict can also be found where characters want different things that are at odds with each other – for instance, one partner wants to stay in the relationship, the other wants out.</p>
<p>If a character’s only desire is stop another character from achieving their goals, the conflict here could easily come across as fake or melodramatic. Unless you are trying to create an entirely malicious or evil character, stay clear of this approach. People aren’t <strong>usually</strong> like this, so unless you are deliberately trying to write a psycho- or sociopathic antagonist, try to give characters opposing desires, not the desire to oppose.</p>
<div style="display:block"><small><em>posted in <a href="http://www.anythingfictional.com/category/writing/">Writing</a> by Chris <a href="http://www.anythingfictional.com/2008/10/using-desire-to-create-conflict/#comments">Leave A Comment</a><br />&copy;2010 <a href="http://www.anythingfictional.com">Anything Fictional</a>. All Rights Reserved.</em></small></div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Have you ever read a book where the main character doesn’t seem to want anything, or if they do have something they want, they don’t fight to get it? It’s very likely that you would have found that character – and the book as a whole – incredibly lifeless and boring. And if you <em>haven’t</em> read a book like this, it’s likely because these sorts of stories just don’t get published these days.</p>
<p>What we want is a big part of human psychology. What we desire, what we want to achieve in life, is part of what makes us individuals. If everyone wanted to the same thing, there would be nothing interesting about meeting other people, and there would be no place for marketers (ok, so this might make the world a better place.) What we want gives a reason to get up in the morning, gives purpose and meaning to the activities we perform between when we wake up in the morning and go to sleep at night.</p>
<p>In fiction, asking what a character <strong>wants</strong> is the first thing that you need to find out about <em>any</em> character you create, even minor ones which might appear only for a page or two. There are numerous insights you can gain into a character by working out what they desire:</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Why</strong> do they want this? This gets deep into the motivation of the character, and can be used to tease out backstory and other character traits.</li>
<li><strong>What</strong> do they hope this bring to their lives? When people want something, they usually have some vision of how their lives will be better in the future when they get it. Characters need these same imagined futures as well.</li>
<li><strong>How</strong> will they go about fulfilling this desire? Two people with the same goal may find different approaches to achieving it, depending on their values, morals, standards and many other factors. How the character chooses to fulfill their desire will drive the action of the story.</li>
</ul>
<p>Depth of character can be drawn out by giving a character multiple desires, especially if these desires clash with each other. This causes internal conflict and can add shades and personality to an otherwise 2-dimensional or stereotyped character. You get to see who a character really is, how she will juggle both desires and try to achieve both.</p>
<p>Most importantly, characters need to fight to achieve their desires – they need to want what they want. This is the one area where fiction needs to be depart from the real world. It will happen a lot that real people will give up on a desire at the first sign of conflict or hardship. Fictional characters <em>cannot do this</em>. It makes them weak, and really, what’s the point in telling their story. There is a place in fiction for weak characters, but it should never be your main characters.</p>
<p>Knowing what the character desires – and how he will fight to achieve his goals – you now have all the information you need to develop <strong>conflict</strong> in the story. A story where the character gets everything he wants easily is boring. If achieving a goal isn’t a challenge fraught with opposition, competition, dangers, self-doubt and any other road block to success, then it’s attainment is hollow and unsatisfying – for the reader as well as the character. Readers will have a hard time suspending their disbelief if the events conspire to fulfill a character’s desire easily – in most people’s experience, that’s not the way the world works.</p>
<p>Good conflict comes about when one character’s desires clash with those of another.  Maybe they have the same desire – winning a competition, finding the hidden treasure first, winning the heart of the beautiful princess, etc, etc – but only one of them can have it. Conflict can also be found where characters want different things that are at odds with each other – for instance, one partner wants to stay in the relationship, the other wants out.</p>
<p>If a character’s only desire is stop another character from achieving their goals, the conflict here could easily come across as fake or melodramatic. Unless you are trying to create an entirely malicious or evil character, stay clear of this approach. People aren’t <strong>usually</strong> like this, so unless you are deliberately trying to write a psycho- or sociopathic antagonist, try to give characters opposing desires, not the desire to oppose.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>Creating Empathy</title>
		<link>http://www.anythingfictional.com/2008/09/creating-empathy/</link>
		<comments>http://www.anythingfictional.com/2008/09/creating-empathy/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 30 Sep 2008 12:04:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Chris</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Writing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[characters]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.anythingfictional.com/?p=56</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>In fiction, empathy is incredibly important. If a reader is not able to empathise with your character – especially your main character – the will lose interest in the story. It seems like human nature that once you empathise with someone, you begin to <em>care</em>, as if what they are going through is what <em>you</em> are going through, and you want to see a positive outcome in the end.</p>
<p>Many writers just starting out are told that they need to make the reader empathise with the protagonist, but this can be a tricky business to do consciously. For me, my writing to date has been mostly about plot and story without a lot of conscious choices regarding characters. Some characters have happened to be empathetic, others not as much as they could or should have been. So I’m in a position now where I’m trying to consciously learn this skill.</p>
<p>If empathy is an intellectual understanding of the way someone is thinking and feeling &#8211; to be able to step into someone else’s proverbial shoes &#8211; your job as a writer is not to make the reader <em>think </em>and <em>feel </em>the way a character does, but to make the reader understand <span style="text-decoration: underline;">why</span>.</p>
<p>The first step you must take as a writer you want any hope of creating empathy in the reader is to empathise with the character yourself.I has this experience recently of coming to relate to one of my own characters. This character is the villian, the baddie, the antagonist. To me, he’d always been a manipulative SOB, the puppetmaster making everyone dance on his strings. His primary motivation was to have control of everything. He was very two-dimensional, not a solid character at all.</p>
<p>But I’d been exploring his past because it was very important to the progression of the story and found that an action I’d always thought motivated by the desire to manipulate another person had in fact been done to keep a promise. All of a sudden, I could relate to him and even see that deep down, he was actually a decent person. This makes for a very interesting villain, the sort I’d want to read about myself.</p>
<p>So what was the change here? Why did looking at it this way change my view of the character? I believe it is because I found a positive intention behind the action. The character wants to keep his promise – a value that I can relate to. I can now see myself taking that same action in the same circumstances.</p>
<p>Maybe this is the trick to creating empathy: find the positive intention, the relatable quality of any motivation. This can be applied to almost any motivation – even a villain’s – and by delving into these actions we can get to the humanity beneath it.</p>
<p>And in the end, isn’t that what all good fiction is about…</p>
<div style="display:block"><small><em>posted in <a href="http://www.anythingfictional.com/category/writing/">Writing</a> by Chris <a href="http://www.anythingfictional.com/2008/09/creating-empathy/#comments">Leave A Comment</a><br />&copy;2010 <a href="http://www.anythingfictional.com">Anything Fictional</a>. All Rights Reserved.</em></small></div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In fiction, empathy is incredibly important. If a reader is not able to empathise with your character – especially your main character – the will lose interest in the story. It seems like human nature that once you empathise with someone, you begin to <em>care</em>, as if what they are going through is what <em>you</em> are going through, and you want to see a positive outcome in the end.</p>
<p>Many writers just starting out are told that they need to make the reader empathise with the protagonist, but this can be a tricky business to do consciously. For me, my writing to date has been mostly about plot and story without a lot of conscious choices regarding characters. Some characters have happened to be empathetic, others not as much as they could or should have been. So I’m in a position now where I’m trying to consciously learn this skill.</p>
<p>If empathy is an intellectual understanding of the way someone is thinking and feeling &#8211; to be able to step into someone else’s proverbial shoes &#8211; your job as a writer is not to make the reader <em>think </em>and <em>feel </em>the way a character does, but to make the reader understand <span style="text-decoration: underline;">why</span>.</p>
<p>The first step you must take as a writer you want any hope of creating empathy in the reader is to empathise with the character yourself.I has this experience recently of coming to relate to one of my own characters. This character is the villian, the baddie, the antagonist. To me, he’d always been a manipulative SOB, the puppetmaster making everyone dance on his strings. His primary motivation was to have control of everything. He was very two-dimensional, not a solid character at all.</p>
<p>But I’d been exploring his past because it was very important to the progression of the story and found that an action I’d always thought motivated by the desire to manipulate another person had in fact been done to keep a promise. All of a sudden, I could relate to him and even see that deep down, he was actually a decent person. This makes for a very interesting villain, the sort I’d want to read about myself.</p>
<p>So what was the change here? Why did looking at it this way change my view of the character? I believe it is because I found a positive intention behind the action. The character wants to keep his promise – a value that I can relate to. I can now see myself taking that same action in the same circumstances.</p>
<p>Maybe this is the trick to creating empathy: find the positive intention, the relatable quality of any motivation. This can be applied to almost any motivation – even a villain’s – and by delving into these actions we can get to the humanity beneath it.</p>
<p>And in the end, isn’t that what all good fiction is about…</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Good writing advice from a friend</title>
		<link>http://www.anythingfictional.com/2008/09/good-writing-advice-from-a-friend/</link>
		<comments>http://www.anythingfictional.com/2008/09/good-writing-advice-from-a-friend/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Sep 2008 11:09:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Chris</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Writing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[advice]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[characters]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[style]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.anythingfictional.com/?p=22</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>I recently did a deal with a friend of mine: I&#8217;d help him set up a website if he would read and review one of my in-progress novels. I think we each thought we were getting a sweet deal.</p>
<p>This friend is actually the brother of another good friend of mine. We&#8217;d met in London during the year I lived there, and we&#8217;d hit it off immediately &#8211; we were both writers. He&#8217;d been writing for longer than I have, and more consistently too no doubt &#8211; breaks between writing for me are often measured in years. He&#8217;s delved further into the publishing industry than I ever have, rewritten one of his novels countless times, so as far as I&#8217;m concerned, this is someone who knows what he&#8217;s talking about when it comes to fiction writing.</p>
<p>I thought I&#8217;d share some of the advice he gave me &#8211; you never know who else might find it interesting:</p>
<ol>
<li><strong>Understand how you write</strong> &#8211; my writing <em>style</em> is not something I give a lot of thought. I just tend to write stuff, and if it comes together with decent grammar, I&#8217;m satisfied. Maybe I do have a style of my own, but it&#8217;s just unconscious and I don&#8217;t recognise it. But as is often the case, once I started thinking about this, I realised that my style is very &#8230; proper. My grammar is often probably too good. One of the things that I always find myself doing is correctly those red squiggly underlines that MS Word uses to make you feel bad about yourself. <span style="text-decoration: line-through;">Anyone</span> Most people can create a grammatically correct sentence. But the more I learn about it, a writer&#8217;s style can often come from how they <em>break</em> the rules, not how perfectly they follow them.</li>
<li><strong>Avoid cardboard-cutout characters</strong> &#8211; my friend did qualify this point by saying that my characters were pretty developed in this regard, but I know that this is the weakest part of my own writing. This has come from my own analysis of what I write, as well as from other peer feedback and professional appraisals. I think that my faults in this area result from:
<ol>
<li><em>Not knowing enough about the characters</em> &#8211; I tend to balk at delving too deeply into a character&#8217;s past and/or psychology. It&#8217;s not hard &#8211; you can make up whatever you want about them. But without this, you end up&#8230;</li>
<li><em>Not knowing enough about their motivations</em> &#8211; Writing a character&#8217;s past will give you clues about how they will behave in the context of your story. It will give you hints about what drives them, what&#8217;s important to them, what will make them laugh, cry, shout, etc. And if you don&#8217;t know any of that, you can&#8217;t help&#8230;</li>
<li><em>Creating stereotyped or similar characters</em> &#8211; I started reading a book last year where the two main characters spoke in the same cynical tones and told the same jokes. I didn&#8217;t make it through the book, it annoyed me that much. But my own writing suffers in the same way. I&#8217;ve never mastered how to make each character&#8217;s dialog sound different, and characters of the same gender share very similar behaviours at times. Someone told me once that all my female characters tend to cry at the slightest provocation.</li>
</ol>
</li>
<li><strong>Know why each chapter is there</strong> &#8211; the advice was pretty much this: justify the existence of each and every chapter &#8211; and hell, every scene for that matter. He suggested asking two questions:
<ol>
<li><em>Why is this chapter here?</em></li>
<li><em>What do I want from this chapter?</em></li>
</ol>
<p>To answer these questions, as a writer you&#8217;ve really got to think about why you wrote the scene in the first place. We writers often get attached to particular scenes &#8211; maybe they were fun to write, or we used lots of flowery language that we think sounds great &#8211; but a writer should always be prepared to delete a scene if it&#8217;s not serving a purpose for the story.The second question is a gem. I&#8217;d never thought to think what I &#8211; as the writer &#8211; wanted from a chapter. This uncovers a lot of <em>bad</em> reasons for the chapter being there. If it&#8217;s there merely so you can have one character tell another character what the reader needs to know &#8211; ie. exposition &#8211; then you have a serious problem, and you seriously need to rethink the first question. But you answer that you want the chapter to reveal a mystery, characterise your hero, or even just be a damn entertaining interlude, then at least you know consciously what you purpose is when writing the chapter, and this will surely show.</li>
</ol>
<div style="display:block"><small><em>posted in <a href="http://www.anythingfictional.com/category/writing/">Writing</a> by Chris <a href="http://www.anythingfictional.com/2008/09/good-writing-advice-from-a-friend/#comments">Leave A Comment</a><br />&copy;2010 <a href="http://www.anythingfictional.com">Anything Fictional</a>. All Rights Reserved.</em></small></div>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I recently did a deal with a friend of mine: I&#8217;d help him set up a website if he would read and review one of my in-progress novels. I think we each thought we were getting a sweet deal.</p>
<p>This friend is actually the brother of another good friend of mine. We&#8217;d met in London during the year I lived there, and we&#8217;d hit it off immediately &#8211; we were both writers. He&#8217;d been writing for longer than I have, and more consistently too no doubt &#8211; breaks between writing for me are often measured in years. He&#8217;s delved further into the publishing industry than I ever have, rewritten one of his novels countless times, so as far as I&#8217;m concerned, this is someone who knows what he&#8217;s talking about when it comes to fiction writing.</p>
<p>I thought I&#8217;d share some of the advice he gave me &#8211; you never know who else might find it interesting:</p>
<ol>
<li><strong>Understand how you write</strong> &#8211; my writing <em>style</em> is not something I give a lot of thought. I just tend to write stuff, and if it comes together with decent grammar, I&#8217;m satisfied. Maybe I do have a style of my own, but it&#8217;s just unconscious and I don&#8217;t recognise it. But as is often the case, once I started thinking about this, I realised that my style is very &#8230; proper. My grammar is often probably too good. One of the things that I always find myself doing is correctly those red squiggly underlines that MS Word uses to make you feel bad about yourself. <span style="text-decoration: line-through;">Anyone</span> Most people can create a grammatically correct sentence. But the more I learn about it, a writer&#8217;s style can often come from how they <em>break</em> the rules, not how perfectly they follow them.</li>
<li><strong>Avoid cardboard-cutout characters</strong> &#8211; my friend did qualify this point by saying that my characters were pretty developed in this regard, but I know that this is the weakest part of my own writing. This has come from my own analysis of what I write, as well as from other peer feedback and professional appraisals. I think that my faults in this area result from:
<ol>
<li><em>Not knowing enough about the characters</em> &#8211; I tend to balk at delving too deeply into a character&#8217;s past and/or psychology. It&#8217;s not hard &#8211; you can make up whatever you want about them. But without this, you end up&#8230;</li>
<li><em>Not knowing enough about their motivations</em> &#8211; Writing a character&#8217;s past will give you clues about how they will behave in the context of your story. It will give you hints about what drives them, what&#8217;s important to them, what will make them laugh, cry, shout, etc. And if you don&#8217;t know any of that, you can&#8217;t help&#8230;</li>
<li><em>Creating stereotyped or similar characters</em> &#8211; I started reading a book last year where the two main characters spoke in the same cynical tones and told the same jokes. I didn&#8217;t make it through the book, it annoyed me that much. But my own writing suffers in the same way. I&#8217;ve never mastered how to make each character&#8217;s dialog sound different, and characters of the same gender share very similar behaviours at times. Someone told me once that all my female characters tend to cry at the slightest provocation.</li>
</ol>
</li>
<li><strong>Know why each chapter is there</strong> &#8211; the advice was pretty much this: justify the existence of each and every chapter &#8211; and hell, every scene for that matter. He suggested asking two questions:
<ol>
<li><em>Why is this chapter here?</em></li>
<li><em>What do I want from this chapter?</em></li>
</ol>
<p>To answer these questions, as a writer you&#8217;ve really got to think about why you wrote the scene in the first place. We writers often get attached to particular scenes &#8211; maybe they were fun to write, or we used lots of flowery language that we think sounds great &#8211; but a writer should always be prepared to delete a scene if it&#8217;s not serving a purpose for the story.The second question is a gem. I&#8217;d never thought to think what I &#8211; as the writer &#8211; wanted from a chapter. This uncovers a lot of <em>bad</em> reasons for the chapter being there. If it&#8217;s there merely so you can have one character tell another character what the reader needs to know &#8211; ie. exposition &#8211; then you have a serious problem, and you seriously need to rethink the first question. But you answer that you want the chapter to reveal a mystery, characterise your hero, or even just be a damn entertaining interlude, then at least you know consciously what you purpose is when writing the chapter, and this will surely show.</li>
</ol>
]]></content:encoded>
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