Redeeming That Heroine
I think we all agreed a few posts back that while a heroine must be strong, she must also have weaknesses and vulnerabilities that we can relate to.
But what about when those frailties make her the antagonist in an earlier story? How do we go about redeeming this bad girl?
Perhaps by giving her strengths that overshadow her weakness? Or maybe her flaws lead her down a path of hurt and she comes out wiser for it.
In my WIP, the heroine has been a minor antagonist in the stories that came before. I'm trying to redeem her, trying to keep her likeable by showing her soft side and giving her certain heroic qualities.
Julie Lessman did a wonderful post awhile back about redeeming her heroine.
Have you written an unlikeable woman that you'd like to morph into a sympathetic character? How do you do this? How do you change her? Or do you only change the reader's perception of her?
But what about when those frailties make her the antagonist in an earlier story? How do we go about redeeming this bad girl?
Perhaps by giving her strengths that overshadow her weakness? Or maybe her flaws lead her down a path of hurt and she comes out wiser for it.
In my WIP, the heroine has been a minor antagonist in the stories that came before. I'm trying to redeem her, trying to keep her likeable by showing her soft side and giving her certain heroic qualities.
Julie Lessman did a wonderful post awhile back about redeeming her heroine.
Have you written an unlikeable woman that you'd like to morph into a sympathetic character? How do you do this? How do you change her? Or do you only change the reader's perception of her?
Comments
Redemption can come through new experiences, unexpected and life changing ones. Maybe a new character will drag her into their life and as a result, she will find herself dealing with things from her past.
I love stories where the heroine feels hopeless, helpless and as the reader, I do too and then Surpise! And I want to know how she gets through this or even if she does.
Great suggestion about the character having someone new drag her into their life! I hadn't even thought of that!
Stories where we feel the characters' despair are awesome as long as the story ends HEA. LOL
I think it's tough to portray a heroine with all her flaws and still find ways to make the reader really like her.
I suppose one technique is to show her "beating" someone up, and then in the next scene have her doing something totally selfless. The dichotomy makes her more real and likeable.
A bully heroine. That's funny. :-)
It was less of an in-your-face transformation, since she was a minor character throughout just one book. But maybe it would work from one book to the next, too?
As long as you can get the reader to empathize with the character--see her dilemma and why she chose to do the things she did, or her internal struggle in doing so, then we can redeem any bad character and, boy, what growth that offers for the current story.
That's my two-cents worth.
Blessings,
Susan :)
It sounds like you're doing a good job of creating a sympathetic heroine. Congrats for being almost done!
That's interesting. I agree. The beginning is where we form our opinion, so we have to have enough reason to think the character has some good in them, or enough to at least grow throughout the book.
They're who they are, we have to just accept them and not try to manipulate too much.
I have an acting background and when you play an evil character you don't play evil, you figure out what their motivations are and play that.
Great question, though. I think it also depends on POV. Redeeming a first person character might be easier than redeeming a third person character whom we never get into their POV. If that makes sense.
Interesting. So you're saying to show the heroine's good qualities through how the other characters respond to her. I like that idea a lot!
That's so true! Great point, and it circles right back to knowing a character's GMC and how it drives the story.
Morgan Mandel
http://morganmandel.blogspot.com
http://twitter.com/morganmandel
Yep, it's breaking me but the words are flowing. LOL It's like trying to exercise after months of apathy. Hard.
Okay, who is Caroline Bingly? I should know that name, shouldn't I...
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