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Posts Tagged ‘character’

Gearing up for NaNoWriMo

Next month is NaNoWriMo – National Novel Writing Month. I attempted it last year. Didn’t finish. But I got more writing done in a month than I had written for the previous year so I was pretty pleased. This year I want to win! I know if I put my mind to it I can do it. I just have to tell the procrastinator in me to go away for a month. She doesn’t listen very well. She’s always pointing out other things I can do. Tweak one of my websites, play with Excel, watch TV, post updates to Facebook or Twitter, refresh email every five minutes. And the silly thing is I really love my story and want to write it.

This month I will focus. Focus on evicting that procrastinator for two months. Focus on finishing up the current WIP. Focus on preparing for NaNoWriMo. Last year I didn’t really focus. I was all over the place. I didn’t have a plan or an outline. If a scene came to me I wrote it. Towards the end though I started getting stuck because the scenes weren’t coming to me as fast as they were in the beginning.

For this year’s NaNoWriMo I have a plan. I am starting my outline now. I’ve already started my scene by scene outline. One sentence to tell me what the scene is about. I already know this character like I know my best friend. I will be working on my urban fantasy book! I still need a title. I have no idea what I’m going to call it. Title suggestions are more than welcome. It’s an urban fantasy shapeshifter book. Can’t say much more than that though.

I will be using my NaNo tracker again this year. It’s an Excel spreadsheet with randomly generated target number for each day and an actual number. Ideally the actual number will be equal to or higher than the target. I like doing the random number generator because then I have a different target number each day. As you can see I didn’t do very well hitting my target number last year.

So this year I’m making sure I set myself up for success. I am not teaching a workshop this November (I did last year). I am not taking a workshop this November (I did last year). I am going to have an outline. I am going to make dinners early or ask the boyfriend to take care of them for November. I am going to put my headphones on and just write in November. I might even move the laptop to the table in the dining room. I will write 50,000 words in November.

So how are you preparing for NaNoWriMo?

Right now I’m off to work.

Until next time…

Cindy

Brilliant TV

Did usual errands on the weekend. Went to Canadian Tire to pick up bookcases for the library. Went to IKEA to pick up DVD cases for the living room. Grocery shopping so we’d have the necessary ingredients for dinners for the week.

Then we settled in on some television watching. I’ve always been a TV snob but for the wrong reasons. Before it was for the production value. I love being Canadian but I hated Canadian TV. Until Flashpoint and The Border. Those were good shows and didn’t look typically Canadian unless there was a shot of the CN Tower. But now I’m a TV snob for good writing. Not just good. Brilliant. British TV is the absolute best. We’ve been watching an old show called Jonathan Creek. Love it. It kind of reminds me of Murder, She Wrote only WAY better. And it’s not so hard to believe he’d be looking into the murders in the episodes. I love a good murder mystery. And these are really good.

We watched more episodes of Merlin. Love that too. I’ve always loved historicals. And King Arthur and Camelot have always intrigued me. Of course this is before Arthur is king. I’m loving it so far and my only complaint is that we don’t get the episodes here at the same time as they air in the UK.

Next up was a new show. Sherlock. All I can say for that one is BRILLIANT! The Sherlock character is great. I love the characterization. I love the dialogue. I love the interaction between Holmes and Dr. Watson. I’m so glad there’s going to be more of that show.

And of course we can’t forget Doctor Who. Amazing show. I can’t wait for that to come back. As with all the other shows my one complaint is we don’t get it here right away. I just hope we don’t end up months behind like we’ve been in the past.

Because of the boyfriend I’ve been watching a lot of British TV. And I have to say most of it is really, really good. The dramas, the comedies. Great television.

I’m off to work now. Can’t wait to see what we’ll be watching tonight.

Until next time…

Cindy

Plot or character?

What came first? This is the chicken and the egg question for writers. Even though I’m 85% pantser the plot comes to me first. I’ll get an idea for a story and it’s always the plot that plays out in my head. Then I have to come up with characters to populate my story. I’m an action/plot reader. I love lots of action and plot driven stories. Not so much for character driven stories. Yes, I know character drives the plot, but that’s the point. There has to be a plot. There has to be something going on. They have to be doing something. I’ve read books where nothing actually happens. The plot is so thin my two and a half year old niece could blow it away. I keep asking myself when is something going to happen. I like involved, complicated plots. That’s probably why I love spy stories and suspense/thrillers.

Even for my new urban fantasy series the first story came to me first. After I knew the bones about the story the character sprang fully formed complete with angsty backstory. But I had the idea first. I just needed the right character to fill it.

I’m thinking about all of my story ideas. All those half finished, only a proposal, just one chapter stories I have and none of them are character driven. They all have meaty plots that I’ll get to one of these days. Even my historicals had spies and traitors in the mix. My characters had to be searching for something while all the romance stuff was going on. Actually the spying and traitors in the mix helped build the romance.

Maybe that’s why I don’t name my characters right away. Or feel the need to name them right away. The plot comes first for me. So when I first start writing I put in generic names until I really get to know the characters. Then I go back and give them real names.

So what comes first for you? Plot or character?

Until next time…

Cindy

It’s not you. Really.

Creating three dimensional characters isn’t easy. Writers tend to draw on real life experiences so our characters experience those universal emotions. It’s tempting to draw on real life people as well. Much easier than coming up with three dimensional people from scratch. And it can be so freeing. Yesterday at work something happened that really ticked me off. It wasn’t completely this person’s fault. I was anxious to leave so I could go swimming, I was already running behind and then I had to stay a lot longer to deal with something. So on the way home from work I decided this person would be the next victim in my serial killer book. Putting people like that in my books is how I blow off steam so I don’t get angry. And sometimes they actually give me good characters.

But do I do that all the time? No. As hard as it is to come up with sympathetic, three dimensional characters, I do create most of them from scratch. I use various methods for getting to know my characters. And I’ve discovered, partly with the help of Karin Tabke’s advice on characters, that I need to REALLY know them before I can write my stories. I use a template that is a mash up of a number of different templates. I list the basics like height, weight, hair colour, eye colour. Then I go further and pick three positive traits and one negative trait. After that I decide what secret the character has. Now this secret may never come out during the course of the book but they’ll still have a secret that they don’t want anyone to know. I figure out who their family and friends are. What their childhood was like. I figure out their favourite food, colour, music. Then I decide what their personality is like. Are they funny? Depressed? Serious? No matter what role they play in the story I give them a Save the Cat! moment. Something that makes them sympathetic.

After I do all that I figure out the really important stuff. The stuff that will drive the book. I figure out what their goal, motivation and conflict is. Internal and external. What the character wants and why will drive the story. What are they willing to do to get what they want?

One of the reasons I can’t wait to write my new urban fantasy idea is because all of that, down to who her best friend was in college, came to me in a flash. Literally. I was driving home from work and suddenly I just KNEW her. She’s really damaged but she’s going to be a lot of fun to write. I’m sure she’s hiding a few secrets even from me but I’ll find them out.

Anyone out there use real people as the basis for characters? How do you change the character so the people don’t know? If I base a character on a real person I always change something about them so even if the person who the character was based on read it, they wouldn’t know it was them. Except the protagonist in my ghost story who is actually my best friend. But she knows about it. I told her. I did change her name.

Well, off to work.

Until next time…

Cindy

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