Writing: Point of View and the Essence of Character

People. If there is anything a writer should never forget, it is that stories are about people. Not only are they about people, they are even more importantly— for people. Make no mistake, whether your protagonist is a blue cetacean from alpha centauri, an anthropomorphic hip-hoppin rabbit, or a fifteenth century lady-in-waiting they all have personality—they must be humanized for your reader to relate to and like them.

In trying to capture the sense of a person (or alien, or creature), it is essential to know what characterizes. When thinking about character, fiction writers can take a page from journalistic writing, to get a handle on the personalities in their stories. Consider the following questions:

The Five 'W's of Personality
  • Who are they (to themselves and others)?
  • What do they say, and how do they say it? What DON’T they say? Why?
  • Where do they subsist and where do they flourish, and under what circumstances?
  • When are they themselves? When are they somebody else?
  • Why do they exist, and for what purpose? Do they feel they have a purpose and place?
  • How do they perceive the world? How does the world perceive them?

This isn’t a suggestion to make up a laundry list of traits for a character, but they are some recommended things to consider when getting know your characters. In truth, a bunch of details won’t make your people come off the page. However, knowing them well enough that you can answer those questions without thinking is a way of becoming familiar enough with them so that their character can come through on paper.

Coming Alive

The best bits that make a character sparkle are many and varied. However, it usually comes down to a memorable line that simply captures the essence of who that person is. There is no set formula for this. It’s often a moment unintended by the writer that ends up being oh-so-appropriate. It comes from knowing the characters of your story well enough that there is no forcing. Characters that really come across are ones that you are comfortable with. There is no doubt or wavering, you know what that person will do or say in a given situation without giving it much thought.

This is where roleplaying and reading your material aloud really begin to make a difference in your writing. If you have never read your material aloud—or better yet, had someone else read it to you—you’ve never really heard your characters speak. There is no better tool for fine tuning your prose than to listen to rhythms of the words, and more importantly, how your characters speak and act.

A critical consideration here, is whether you hear your characters at all. Is it all exposition with a couple of lines of dialogue? Could be a problem. An engaging narrative is a balance of internalization ANDexternalization (dialogue and interaction). The best characterization tends to be a balance of both as well. Knowing how someone thinks is only part of the puzzle. How they act, and what reactions they exhibit (as opposed to how they feel) give depth and realism to a personality.

In the broadest sense, every character is an archetype painted in broad strokes.

Series of three example

She was the type of girl who cried at weddings and funerals, loved puppies and children, and would have died before violating her oath of service.

This is only one sentence, but in it we get a broad sense of this person. Notice also, that there are also details about the person—things she likes and a tidbit here of what this person does. I cannot stress this too much, a LOT of characterization can be done with a few well thought out lines. Believe it or not, characterization is NOT knowing every last detail about a character. It’s specific details and telling nuances that create a memorable image. This is where you the writer must trust the reader and allow them to have some involvement the creative process. Pin down some hard and fast constants in a character, hint or suggest at other things and let the reader fill in those gaps. Just don’t make those gaps too big—again it’s balance. Enough detail to quench the thirst, but several drinks shy of a buzz.

If this all sounds like hedging; it is. There are so many ways to realize a character that it’s extremely tough to outline specific methods for doing it. Much of the way characterization is handled relates to a writer’s style and voice, which are the ways you decide to present the story. The narrative voice (the expositive presence in the story) has its own distinct character. For MANY, the narrator IS the writer. In beginning work, and too often for my taste, in commercial pieces, that narrator can have a stronger presence than the protagonists of the story. The narrator is omnipresent and all-knowing, and sometimes JUST CAN’T RESIST telling the future of our heroes. These writers simply don’t realize that by telling us how it turns out a hundred pages before it happens blunts our curiosity and drains tension from the work. Narrative presence and story texture are good things, but not at the expense of the plot and characters in your story.

Characters are extensions of the world, it’s reality, and a bleed-through of a writer’s own personality. No matter what you do, your characters will have aspects and elements of yourself in them. You can’t help it. You are a product of your upbringing. Your values, ethics, morals and personal quirks will all worm their way into your fictional people (if you let them). The more you try to make them un-like yourself, the more they become a distorted reflection of you. If there’s anything to take away from this, it’s that you might as well be honest with yourself because your characters will tell the truth on you eventually. Don’t be afraid of it—embrace it.

The Cult of Personality

Okay, enough philosophy about personality and characterization, lets identify some types of personalizing narrative and also give some concrete techniques and examples. As much as possible look for some of the twists that I add to the examples. As mentioned before, characterization often comes down to nuance. I’ve tried in the descriptions and examples to add some of those touches that lift a bit of description to that ‘next level’.

NAME — I don’t think I have to go much into this. The name is where most readers start to know a character. It is also where many writers lose copious amounts of sleep and hair. Names don’t always give the essence of a character, but it really works when they do. Sometimes a name tells a story in itself—as it did in Johnny Carson’s song A Boy Named Sue. A word of advice, don’t get too hung up on a name… I know many who change the names of their characters four and five times during the course of writing their novel. Thank heavens for word processors and search and replace!

PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION — This can be handled a number of ways in narrative. The classic example of this is the character looking in a mirror or other reflective surface and reacting to their own appearance. It’s sooo common, BUT it is the one that allows the writer to describe the point-of-view character without resorting to some narrative viewpoint shift.  Some other examples of direct narrative characterization / description are listed below:

  • Series of three (list) — The writer selects three telling details that provide a quick introductory snapshot of a character. This is a mechanism that, when well thought out provides a strong foundation for further character development. Its strength lays in the fact that it’s simple, straightforward, and doesn’t interrupt the story.
Series of three example

He had a Jesus face, a jock body, and wore bent Ben Franklin glasses.

  • Comparison/contrast — The writer usually uses an already established character as a foil, usually describing how the two people are alike / unalike. This can be particularly effective in-character with a protagonist making a comparison to another. It is most often done is narrative exposition however.
  • Comparison/contrast example 1

    Unlike busty blonde Sally, Rita was dark-haired and petite, with I-dare-you blue eyes.

    The comparison can also be to a generic group.

    Comparison/contrast example 2

    John towered over most men, he felt cramped in doorways and the majority of beds; a veritable bull in the china-closet of life. 

  • Simile / metaphor — This mechanism is similar to comparison / contrast except that the correlation is usually against something that isn’t human. Typically, this is against an animal but it can be an inanimate object too.
  • Simile / metaphor example

    Hugh was a knuckle-dragging ape of a man built like a fire-plug. He had a square face with the lifeless eyes of a shark and the sallow-gray skin of vampire.

    Take note that a physical description is best if it somehow suggests personality. I doubt anyone can read the description of Hugh in the last example and not draw some conclusions about his character and what he does for a living. However, it can sometimes be more subtle like Rita’s ‘I-dare-you blue’ eyes. Always try to make things like a description do double duty if possible. This is ‘packing’ or ‘loading’ your sentences. Balance this against what is simple and straightforward. Be mindful of the tone of the scene. If the passage occurs where action is going on, it will be more terse. In a slower more relaxed setting, you have more room to elaborate.

    INTERNALIZATION — This is the internal dialogue (thoughts) of the viewpoint character. In some cases, you will see writers who give thoughts and emotions of characters who are not the viewpoint character. In my opinion, this is bad writing etiquette. However, I see way too much of it being done by established *cough* authors to completely discount the mechanism. I find such shifts in viewpoint are both unnecessary and jarring—not to mention lazy. If you’re going to ‘head-hop’ anyway, be aware there are some editors who frown on it as much as I do. Try to make it as unobtrusive as possible. I must add, that from a structure and tension standpoint that knowing what everybody is thinking can create problems. Don’t say you weren’t warned. Did I mention I don’t like ‘head-hopping’?

    Remember that there are two aspects of internalization. One part is the characters reactions and interactions with the world. The other part is the CONTEXT that is the basis for those reactions. An example of this is a character who is claustrophobic. That’s a personality trait that can be brought out in a number of ways. The CONTEXT could be that this character was locked in closet for days at time as child and that’s WHY they’re afraid of closed in places. To put it simply, knowing the context is often far more important than the trait itself. Traits often exist as hooks to introduce such character defining information. Another example of this is something like a scar (which would be a physical trait). If you give the scar, it’s very effective if tied to some personality defining experience.

    The last aspect I’ll touch on about internalization is how it’s given to the reader. It can be done in character, or it can be done in an expositive fashion. Obviously, in-character is the better of the two, however, it tends to be the least often done.

    Aspects and types of internalization:

    • Contextual / connective — These are thoughts that provide framing information for the reader. They are often the texture of the story and details that give the story flavor and realism.  An example of this are is when a character goes into a place and they think about the history and events that transpired in the place in years previous. This is listed here as characterizing and personality because the kind of details and things a character catalogues tell us about them—that is IF the author is giving us narrative from the characters point of view and not a travelogue of every locale and object the character encounters. This sort of information is best shared as the viewpoint character knows it—as opposed to how the WRITER knows it. Other examples of this kind of interior context is when the viewpoint meets another character the reader hasn’t seen before, but the viewpoint knows something about.
    Contextual / connective example

    Jane turned to see a tall red-head dressed in jeans and overcoat stagger in and lean against the banister. Hollow eyes looked out of a long face with an upturned nose and weak jaw. The newcomer slapped at the flaccid strands of her hair, then stumbled down the steps like her bones were made of rubber.  Jane recognized the woman and felt a pang of pity. The street people called her Suicide Sally. Jane knew little about Sally except that she was an alcoholic and really bad at killing herself. Poor suicides were people crying for help—help that Jane was in no position to give….

  • Catalytic / reactive — This is internal narrative that comes as a result of something happening in the story.  You’ll find that the majority of internal monologue is of this type. Specifically, these are thoughts that are triggered (catalyzed) by an event. An example of this is someone who can’t see a bouquet of roses without thinking of his recently deceased girlfriend, or a woman who cries when she sees a baby because she lost her own during childbirth. Again, a lot of these internalizations tie to context (as mentioned earlier), it’s up to you the writer to try and give your characters this kind of depth.
  • Catalytic / reactive example

    John saw the lady slap her son, and leaped to his feet. His stomach churned, the sound of flesh-on-flesh echoed in his ears. He could still feel the sting of it after all these years, the memory of Mother’s cold painful smacks and the coppery taste of his own blood…

  • Active / dissociative — This is narrative that has no obvious context or catalyst besides the nature of the viewpoint itself. An example of this would be a character thinking it would be a good day to go out and pick flowers. These thoughts can also be realizations, inspirations, and turning points in a character’s thinking.
  • Active / dissociative example

    Jerry needed a drink. A good stiff one—one strong enough to make him forget this mess. Who knew, maybe when he woke up, it might all be over and he could go back to his normal life.

  • Speculative — Stories wouldn’t get far without speculative internalization. This is a viewpoint character considering a problem or situation. This is when the ‘ifs’ and alternatives of the world get mentally explored. The KINDS of things a character speculates can be very revealing. Is he/she one of those that plans everything to last infinitesimal detail, or says damn the consequences—full speed ahead!
  • Speculative example

    Sigurd knew he was damned no matter which choice he made. If he fought, he’d get drubbed and labeled a weakling. If he ran, he’d be branded a coward and his reputation would be ruined.

  • Disjunctive — These are random thoughts and images that have no readily identifiable cause or catalyst. Dreams sequences are usually disjunctive episodes. It’s common in writing for there to be reoccurring disjunctive ‘beats’ that are clues to something that is revealed to the reader later. Examples of this are a flashes of an image, or a sound, that tie to something hidden in the character’s past.
  • Disjunctive example

    Kara spun toward the sound. Had that been a baby she heard? She was high in the mountains. A baby couldn’t be up here? Could it? Lately, she heard the sound in the most unlikely of places. A baby? It didn’t make any sense. Hiking the pack up on her shoulders, Kara continued to trudge up the slope. A high pitched whine echoed through the peaks. She paused. She could have sworn it sounded like an infant’s wail…

    Internal monologue is your reader’s view into the mind of the viewpoint characters. It is the mechanism through which we learnyour character’s feelings and can get a handle on their goals, desires, and failings. As I have discussed in other segments of the craft articles, remember that stories are best shown—not told. Don’t overdo the internal narrative. Remember that much can be said with a little. You can tell us the character is angry, or you can simply describe their face being hot, their clenched fists and pounding heart. You are doing the same thing, only being more visual and sensual in your depiction.

    It’s All About Attitude

    DIALOGUE — What your characters say, and how they say it is probably the most powerful characterizing force in writing. While we’re discussing dialogue, never forget body language. The raise of an eyebrow, the clench of fist or twitch of an eye… these things are characters talking too—in a visual and expressive shorthand. These are all part of a character’s stage presence in the story.

    Earlier I mentioned reading aloud was suggested. It is almost essential for dialogue if you don’t already have an ear for it. Speech patterns, how people speak, their voice and the context of their words all define the person talking.

    Unfortunately, there’s no magic formula for good dialogue, except that too much of good thing can dilute it. Mostly, it comes down to the blending of aspects. Imagine that slit-eyed Dirty Harry scowl while he aims the forty-four magnum (the world’s most powerful handgun that ‘could blow man’s head clean off’ he tells us), and that growling Clint Eastwood voice rumbling out, “So, do ya feel lucky, Punk? Well, do ya?” It doesn’t have the impact without the gun, the squint, and that rough tone. It’s all part of a persona that is all of a character’s visual traits and habits being expressed together.

    Your characters need a stage presence, a definite attitude that makes them visual and memorable BEFORE we have an opportunity to get in their heads. This is where really doing your homework and thinking visually about your people will benefit your story.

    One helpful thing to do is to cast movie stars in the roles of your characters. Who would fit? How would they deliver the language and what would it sound like? Keep that image in mind when you sit down to write a scene where you’re establishing a character’s personality.

    Again, let me stress, that dialogue is more than the words between the double quotes. To characterize, you must also consider gestures, expressions, and internalizations that set beats and balances in the perception the reader gets of the fictional person.

    It’s important to consider also how characters will interact. Some characters won’t reveal their nature without another to interact with. In some cases, only the right someone. It’s up to you to cast the story so that some of these aspects will be revealed. Some characters only exist to be foils for the main character in a novel or story.

    In the scene that follows, a new character is introduced. It is also this particular juncture we learning some things about the life philosophy of the viewpoint character Wren who was born on the streets, but is now in the company of nobility. This example provides opportunity to look at lot of characterizing aspects—gestures, expressions, and internalizations.

    Interaction and Characterization

    If you pull this example apart you can find a lot of different writing techniques at work. Notice that the characters interact, not only in dialogue, but in physical contact as well. Characters sigh, grin, and give facial expressions. Internal thoughts are interspersed, Wren’s speculations and reactions to the things being said. Note also the use of the MDASH (—) which is used to simulate pauses and breaks in speech. This adds color, rhythm, and impact to dialogue when used effectively.

    Key to what we have here is characters displaying attitude. Notice in this scene, Dorian and Wren at first seem to agree, but really don’t. This mini-scene sets up and shows the way that Dorian twists words. It is this kind of deception that will later be this character’s central defining attribute—everybody respects Dorian, but nobody trusts her.

    There is another element at work in scenes like this, and that is chemistry. Dorian is a extremely educated woman with a perchance for teasing and deception, and Wren is head-strong independent young woman raised in the streets who takes herself pretty seriously. These two are so different that when set at tangents to one another, there’s bound to be sparks. This is an aspect of planning the scenes you choose to write. Dorian could have merely disagreed with Wren, but instead verbally tricks her. Both Dorian’s choice, and Wren’s reaction “Dammit, I was starting to like you…” work to characterize both of them. The chemistry, the attitude that each brings out in each other is a dynamic that makes scenes both more interesting and entertaining.

    The next example shows a more extreme character, more stylized with even more attitude. Master Falor is introduced in this scene, where he will test the protagonist Corim to see if he is worthy to be a teacher in the sword-fighting school. Here, we have action interspersed with characterization. We have many of the same elements of the first example, only now it is done in an action scene.

    Characterization, Conflict & Action

    This scene does several things. It introduces a new character, and pits them against the viewpoint person. Tal is a brusque, rough, no compromise kind of personality that is a stark contrast to the more learned and refined Corim. They are two different kinds of warriors and they clash physically and philosophically. Here again, it’s an element of the dynamic between the characters that brings out their personality.

    One thing to note here is the use of a specific technique for doing more immediate internal dialogue. Corim’s internal thoughts are rendered in first person with italic text. This mechanism has pluses and minuses. First of all, it’s very succinct and personal. It makes us tighter in Corim’s viewpoint where he is essentially talking or thinking to himself. The one problem with this way of doing it, is that it relies on italics which while not necessarily an interruption, does stand out on the page if there is a lot of it. Also, the fact that the thoughts are in first person can be a jolt for less tolerant readers. Some people hate it.

    A small digression—you can’t please everybody

    Some decisions you make (like first person thoughts or head hopping) are bound to annoy somebody. Your style and what is acceptable to you is part of your unique voice. As you get more experience, your voice will grow and adapt to throw out the nuances no-one likes. Even when you’ve grown to that point, simply realize that some people will love what you do, others will loathe it. You will NEVER satisfy everyone. If only ten percent of the people who read your material think it’s genius, then you will be a success. That’s why genres exist. A fan of Tom Clancy novels, isn’t necessarily going to like something written by Danielle Steele. Just because they both write best selling novels doesn’t mean they’re everyone’s cup of tea. Clancy has a style and subject material that is targeted at people who like and read techno thrillers. To a romance reader, his books probably lack every facet what makes of good romance novel what it is.

    Know who your readers will be and do what you can to adapt your style to appeal to as many of those people as you can. I write fantasy, science fiction, and mainstream material. I have an idea of what hard core readers in each group must have in order to be happy. Sometimes my decision is not to cater to that core audience, but instead to target the more casual reader. Science fiction stories tend to be plot driven, fantasy over the years has gradually become more character driven. I bridge the two by having strong characters and romantic elements in my science fiction and fantasy. I “soften” the science, perhaps a little too much for the tech heads. For really dedicated “epic fantasy” audience, my magic is perhaps a little too concrete, it’s more like a science than a “mysterious power”. I do this to appeal to an adventurous segment of all three audiences who dabble in light science fiction and fantasy. What have I done? Possibly, I’ve alienated two potential audiences. On the other hand, I might be potentially appealing to a large number of people who might otherwise never even look at my material.

    Now you know the gamble we all take in writing. In my case, I made specific choices and compromises that are part of the course of creating my works. If you are just starting out you may not have written enough material to judge or care about such things. Simply realize as you go along, that it will eventually become an important consideration. As I said, you cannot possibly please everyone. However, it IS possible to be universally annoying. If ninety-nine people out of a hundred wince when reading your stuff, a little introspective style adjustment may be in order.

    Not ‘what’ but ‘how’

    As is often common for me, I define and classify aspects of writing for you. I’ve shown different ways to characterize, but I haven’t mentioned anything about how to come up with characters. This is a question that many readers might be asking after having read this far. Techniques are all well and good, but they are pretty useless if you don’t have any characters to characterize.

    How do you come up with characters? Well friends, that’s one of the key creative aspects of writing. It’s as basic as this: if you’re writing a boy-meets-girl story, you have to have a boy and you certainly need a girl (or what passes for one) or it simply isn’t going to work.

    For most people, the basic cast of their work is intuitively obvious. For others who have a more nebulous concept of their story, it’s something that’s worked out piecemeal. Personally, I never work this way. I know the characters before I even start to fashion a plot. Now you know the pitfall of doing it the other way around. You have to come up with people to do the deeds, and right the wrongs.

    This certainly isn’t impossible, but it is harder. You need to know your story well enough to know what will resolve it. You have to have a protagonist up to the task. Once you have a protagonist, it’s natural to spiral outward. You need an antagonist. You need supporting characters. As you pull all that together then it becomes a creative chore rather than a speculative one.

    When you start thinking about characters, always keep attitude in mind. If it’s the protagonist, is it somebody whom the reader will follow for the length of the story? If it’s somebody we don’t like or won’t root for, then your story won’t work well. The reader has to be motivated. They have to want to know how it turns out.

    Casting and Archtypes

    The cast of your novel should have some balance or symmetry, if you can, plan for dynamics between characters. Even though it makes no sense, in life, opposites do seem to attract one another. How and why this is so is a mystery to me. However, I know plenty of marriages that once I got to know the husband and wife, I had to wonder… how in the world did these two get together, much less have children…???

    As you work with thinking up dynamics and casting supporting characters, you’ll find that every story has one or more archetypical people.

    For instance, “the mentor” type of personality appears in countless stories. The sagely person who teaches the protagonist the important things they need to go on. As with the mentor there are many other types who fill key gaps in a narrative. The diagram lists several. However, I’m certain you’ll conceive of more when you start thinking in “generic” character terms.

    The diagram is done as two circles. The circle most immediate protagonist has the types that tend to occupy bigger roles both in terms of the story and in the protagonist’s life.

    I’ve tried to coach some of these titles in terms that identify them in a more general sense. The “boss” refers to a figure that may serve a mentor function but is more removed from the protagonist’s life, or has possibly died but left our hero with some gems of wisdom. This can be the gruff army sergeant that got our hero through the war alive, or even the ruler wielding teacher who’s all-too-frequent whacks on the noggin set the protagonist on the straight-and-narrow. The snitch/ source/ wiseguy is some savvy character (usually seedy or snobbish) who has the critical inside information needed for the next step in the plot. The “ex” is the jaded ex- wife/husband / girlfriend/boyfriend who knows the seamy past and particulars of our story figure. Most of these are pretty self-explanatory. They are common and often crucial people that give the story depth and make it interesting.

    These types are provided as a starting point to help give your characters personality. Each of these generic people has some established traits that you can stay with or break away from. For instance, the tagalong is a Hollywood favorite. The bumbling idolizer who follows the hero around and inevitably gets into trouble. The person is the comic relief more times than not. Usually, this character follows the third-try-is-a-charm rule. Throughout the story they will always be wrong and helpless, basically baggage that the protagonist(s) must lug toward the story climax. It is usually right when things look their worst that the otherwise useless tagalong comes up with some crucial bit of evidence, or conceives some clever plan that can actually work. Watch enough movies and the “tagalong” type will crop up in one form or another, over and over…

    When looking at the different characters in your story, think about them as types first, then differentiate them as you feel necessary. Regardless, they will fit those particular roles no matter what makeover you give them.

    It’s all about change

    A key thing you must remember when populating your story is that characters should change. If the hero is already perfect and has nothing to learn, then there will be no character arc. Without a character arc, your person will lose a great deal of appeal. Mister / Missus perfect is not all that interesting. It’s the flaws, foilables, and weaknesses that will make your characters more engaging. It is the overcoming of these obstacles that provides story tension and character arc. An example of this is a character who is afraid of heights but then must overcome his fear to rescue the heroine from a high cliff.

    Don’t mistake, it’s okay to have a glamorous good-looking hero or heroine, but there should be something that compensates. This can be the breath-taking woman who, because of low self esteem, thinks of herself as ugly. Another twist is the same beauty who spouts obscenities or has atrocious table manners.

    The key thing to remember they’re called ‘characters’. They need some signature feature that makes them stand-out in some way. You can of course make someone ‘terribly plain’. However, it’s ‘terribly’ plain… not just plain. It’s not only the attribute but how you focus and work with it. This is where your imagination needs to come into play. Keep your mind open to ironic twists that capture the imagination. It can be as simple as the seven foot tall basketball star infatuated with driving tiny Italian sports cars… it can be anything—funny, serious, or just odd—as long as it fits and works to make that person memorable.

    Don’t forget that the antagonists (villains) need to be worked in a similar fashion. In fact, the antagonist can, in some cases, be a much harder character to cast and characterize. This is because to be truly effective the bad-guy should have some redeeming characteristics. Why? Well, it’s easy to squish an annoying bug. It’s harder to do the same thing to a person. If the antagonist is entirely evil with no redeemable features, there’s no conflict in destroying them. If, on the other hand, the evil-doer is a product of their environment, has some noble qualities and is really doing what they feel is right and justified—your protagonists will struggle some with bringing them down. Darth Vader is just a mean nasty Sith Lord until we learn he’s Luke’s father, and we find that the emperor has subjugated him. Oh, make no bones, he’s bad…but he’s not all bad. Vader will stand with the emperor right up to the end. No matter how evil he is, he’s still Luke’s father, so defeating him—no matter how essential it is—is a struggle for Luke.

    It’s all up to you

    Creating memorable and engaging characters is an essential part of story telling. It’s more than just a single fascinating person. It’s a cast of characters who interact in interesting ways and possess a particular chemistry that allows them to express a range of emotions and feelings.

    Because of human nature, characters tend to be defined more by their failings than by their strengths. This is because it is their failings that will (in a good story) be tested.

    Once we have some good characters, the work doesn’t stop there. They have to be described and internalized well. They need characterizing ticks and traits that make them recognizable.

    In the end, your characters are extensions of you and the world you have created. Recognize which aspects of yourself these people represent (however distorted), then try to bring it out and elaborate on it. That sense of you is part of what will make that character more life-like because you are alive.

    In this section we’ve taken a long look a characters. We’ve looked at ways to describe a character. The dynamics and chemistry of characters, and various archetypes. We also looked at character traits and flaws and how they play into plot and story. In the next section, we begin a three-part series on the various aspects of description.

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