Let’s discuss characters. Whether one, two, or
three dimensional these plot driven fictitious bastards are devious little
creatures that have caused me to shout at my lap top, toss a book across the
room, shake my hand in the air, and drink heavily.
There is always more than one character, and in some
cases there are too many and I need to keep a list of them. (one word:
nightmare)
But it is the stubborn character, the one
with a mind of his/her own that always throws me for a loop.
For instance, I am writing the third book
to the Branded Trilogy and I am super pumped for this one. I’ve taken months to
plot out the book, create new characters, and add twists and turns. It will be
awesome!
Easy peasy, right? WRONG!
Nothing is easy when you have a character
like mine. He has become a living being outside of my head who is constantly yammering on about his story. This spells danger, disaster, whiskey, and more whiskey for me.
I am the inventor of the book. I write the
damn thing, but this character has other motives. He wants to go in another
direction that I had not planned on. And planning is everything when writing a
book, especially to someone who has OCD.
I have tried to appease him by placing him
in other situations, or pulling him in the direction I need him to go, but the
bugger won’t budge. Hell, I’ve even threatened to write him out of the bloody book,
but he says I need him and is firm on me moving him in the way he wants to go.
Am I crazy? After all this is a fictitious
character. One, may I remind you, I created. Does it matter
that I have long
winded conversations with him almost everyday on the plotting of the book? How
about the fact that the other protagonist has decided to join in? She feels the
same way.
BLAST!!
How did this happen? They were so good in
the second book, following orders and doing everything I wrote. Now, they’re
like my dog when I walk her, she is always pulling me the opposite direction.
What gives?
I am good to these guys. Yes, I write them
into some unfortunate situations, but I always get them out. I give them what they deserve by the end of the book. Why are they
complaining?
I never hear anything from the antagonist.
He is right as rain being the villain, doing any despicable thing I write. He
doesn’t stop me mid paragraph and want to be the protagonist for goodness sakes. He is happy with
his place in the book…even if I kill him off!
Not my protagonists. They keep telling me
it is their story and I need to stay true to them. I get that! But I had it all
plotted out…can’t they see how much work I’ve put in already? I don’t want to
change things now!
BAH!
I know this insanity will not stop. They will continue to whisper in my ear what they want. I won't get anything done...and writing the book, well that will cease too.
I love them, even though they piss me off. They’ve become my best friends, who I cherish, but at the same time I’d like to delete.
I haven't a choice...
I want to tell their story. Which means one thing...I’ll have to write it the
way they want me to.
Happy Friday, Friends!!!
Cheers,
Kat
Funny how the characters take over. Sometimes I dream about them and they do feel real. That's part of the joy of writing :)
ReplyDeleteSure is, Kristina! We get so attached to our characters and their story that it's in our minds constantly. All for the love of writing. :)
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