Ninja Writers Academy: Character Development
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I thought it would be fun to run a little series of Ninja Writer Academy Posts about diving a little deeper into your storyās basic elements. Letās start with character.
Character Development seems to be one of those scary things that new writers get hung up on.
You can find complicated, intimidating character development worksheets out there. If you Google around the Internet, youāll find plenty of experts giving you lists of things that youāre supposed to know before you even start to write your story.
I take a different tact. My favorite way to work on character development is with guided free writing. I have a list of questions that I think about while Iām considering a new player. I start with a name and a basic (very basic) description, and then just start writing.
After all, thatās what we do, right? Itās how we process. Doesnāt it make sense to process something this important to your story the same way?
Here are the Character Development questions I use:
What is their ordinary world like?
What kind of work do they do?
Who do they love? Who do they hate?
Who loves and hates them?
Whatās missing in them?
Whatās important to them?
Who is their best friend?
Who is their worst enemy?
How resistant are they to change?
What would it take to get them to embark on big change?
This is a biggie: How are they flawed?
Donāt list all the questions and answer them. Please. Donāt. Just use the questions to guide you as you write a page or two about this compelling person.
I actually do this exercise with every important character in a story: hero, antagonist, love interest, mentor, sidekick, etc. I also try to do this work in no more than about 20 minutes per character. Set a timer if you have to. It can be easy to get caught up in spending hours or even days in making sure your character development is PERFECT. Donāt do that to yourself!
Iāve had a character on my mind for a while. Hereās how this exercise worked out for him:
Will Sorren. Age, 50. Six feet tall, relatively fit (maybe a little softer than he used to be), over-styled brown hair, highlighted. Blue eyes. Dimpled chin.
Will is an aging rock star. When he was young he was nicknamed āThe Face.ā He had as much attention for his looks as for his music. He used to play to stadiums full of screaming girls. Now he plays to show-rooms half-filled with the same girls, now middle-aged housewives. He canāt play new music without risking a riot.
Worse of all, heās not aging well. The public is brutal regarding his looks. What happened to The Face memes hound him. He still has the charisma that set him apart when he was young, but heās done a little too much to try to hold on to his looks and it shows. Too much surgery. Too much Botox.
Will is still a musician, still playing the same music that heās been playing for 30 years. He lives in Las Vegas and makes a living doing nostalgia shows with other 80s has beens.
Will married an actress when he was still The Face. Sheās aging far better than him and his jealousy of her beauty and his insecurity over the publicās fascination with his loss of beauty is eroding their relationship.
Heās never been able to internalize his success. He had one breakout song when he was twenty-two and it was in a genre outside the pure rock he set out to make. He followed the success and the fame, and wound up a pop star. He still hears his songs in elevators and grocery stores and it always makes him sad.
Willās mother left him when he was a little boy. He was raised by his grandmother, who was brutal with him. His looks and his music were the things that saved him and when he feels like heās lost both, he is completely lost.
Will needs to find a way to let go of his youth. He wants to get it back. Heās utterly resistant to change, even when itās obvious that change is happening whether heās ready for it or not.
His best friend is the bass player in his band. Theyāve been friends since high school. Aaron is far more accepting of their slide from rock gods to pop stars to has beens.
For will to change, heāll has to have a seismic shift in his perspective of himself. Think George Bailey experiencing Bedford Falls as if he hadnāt been born.
Willās heroism takes time to come through. He starts the story hurt and stuck in a very shallow mindset.
Hereās your homework this weekend, Ninja!
Develop a CharacterĀ Use the questions in this post to guide you as you free write about your storyās hero. Or antagonist. Or love interest. Or any character that could use a little development. (Hint: thatās probably all of them!) Set a timer for 20 minutes. Donāt let yourself get bogged down with perfection on this one.
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Ninja Writers Academy: Character Development was originally published on Ninja Writers