I’m going for NaNoWriMo and it’s kind of exciting. Never
done it before and almost didn’t do it again this year. I know I will not
accomplish the goal. There are too many things going on, still. Plus I signed
up for Cheryl Klein’s plot class. That’s an all-day Saturday in the middle of
the month and the lady has a labor-intensive pre-class assignment. Plus there’s
election night and Thanksgiving. And do I have my new project planned out
enough to go? Doesn’t matter. I’m trying NaNoWriMo anyway.
I’ve got the write-it-in-30-days storyline roughed out in
mind. Now I need characters to carry the story. Middle grade boys need
something to read so there’s my MC. He’s got to have a dog; every kid needs a
dog. It’s set suburban modern day so he has access to technology, social media,
5th grader mode of transportation, etc. So now who is my kid?
Charlotte Dillon at www.charlottedillon.com
has a very nice site to help you get to know your main character. Besides sage
advice on the people in your story her site has some great links, though some
of them are no longer active. She also offers a character chart. You can cut
and paste into a Word document then fill in. The chart is designed for adult
characters, but children’s writers can pull from it as well. The exercise is obvious
for your main character, but the antagonist and other major players deserve a
chart of their own.
Dillon starts with the basics: character’s name, nickname,
age, physical features, family and friends, etc. She suggests tag lines or
gestures such as “holy moly” or cracking of knuckles so when those things are
done or said, the reader knows whom. Dillon goes deeper with what she calls the
character’s character. What are their good points or bad, their attitude and
temperament, their weaknesses and phobias? What do they want, what’s their
motivation, and how driven are they to achieve it?
Similar to Kathleen Duey, Dillon has questions to ask your
character to get to the heart of them. They include:
-If you could change one
thing about yourself, what would it be?
-What do you do when you
are angry?
-Do you have a secret
passion? What? Why is it a passion? And why is it a secret?
-Deep down, what does
you really think of yourself? Are you fair, moral, honest, etc.?
-How do you deal with
anger, sadness, external/internal conflict, change, loss, jealousy, hurt, etc.?
Why?
-And my personal
favorite: If you had a weakness for one of the seven deadly sins, which one
would it be and why? (pride, greed, lust, envy, gluttony, wrath, sloth)
It’s still early in
NaNoWriMo. It may be worth your time to get to know your characters before you get too far into
it.
2 comments:
Great questions! I need to use those for my characters. Unfortunately, I'm not doing NaNo this year. It was a hard choice since I'd done it for the past two.
Good luck! You'll have a lot of fun :)
I think all these questions are great and it's important to get to know your characters well. But for me, no matter how many questions I answer about them, I never seem to get to know them fully until I WRITE THEIR STORY.
That's why the revising part is so important to me! Good luck with NaNo. I'm doing it again for the third year in a row.
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