writer & musical theatre lyricist

Filtering by Tag: character

David Mitchell and letters from your characters

Added on by Christopher Staskel.

yesterday, i said i was plotting my novel using a slightly altered Snowflake Method. i’ve replaced the character bibles/profiles/summaries with a trick i learned from one of my all-time favorite authors, David Mitchell.

“This might be a trade secret,” Mitchell jests, “but it works for me, and you can have it.”

he suggests writing letters to yourself in the voice of your characters about the things they care about, like money, work, politics, religion, sex, and the concerns/other people/world of the story.

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i find this advice so helpful and reassuring and accessible, i have it Scotch-taped above my makeshift writing desk, right next to the Harmon story circle. and somewhere along the line, i’ve added the topic of ‘Family,” which rounds it out to a nice, uneven nine.

“When you get stuck, get systematic,” Mitchell says. “You’re usually stuck because you don’t know your characters well enough.”

listen to his full advice below—

creating complex characters

Added on by Christopher Staskel.

i’m currently plotting a novel using a (slightly altered) version of the Snowflake Method. so far, it’s been relatively hardship-free.

i’m about to switch from fleshing out the plot to fleshing out characters, however, so i returned to this video—another great one from Shaelin Bishop—on creating complex characters.

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i’m particularly drawn to this concept of “the dark room,” which is basically a key aspect of the character that is never made explicit in the story, but a reader could infer what it is based on other elements present. now my homework is to find the Alice Munro essay where the term originated…

watch the whole video below!