Chapter 23 - Character — The Carrot and Stick Approach
How to make characters that have character
“Just because you are a character doesn’t mean that you have character.”
— Winston Wolfe, Pulp Fiction
How do you make characters that have character? Here’s my carrot and stick approach.
Badly written characters are cardboard cut-outs: unconvincing, sensational, two-dimensional, exaggerated and only there to serve the plot.
Like painting by numbers or dot-to-dot, they’re just there to fill in the blanks.
They’re often stereotypes and don’t have enough flaws or substance to make them interesting.
Good characters are like icebergs — there’s far more to them than the jagged bit that you can see sticking out of the water.
To create them, you have to know what the iceberg looks like underneath the water.
If you know something about the character and don’t say it out loud, it will inform your writing.
Your readers will pick up on it sub-consciously and start to ask questions — What’s their secret? What happened to them? Who are they deep down?
From the carefully chosen tip-of-the-iceberg, that you…
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