Put Your Character in a Box
The irony of characters, in my opinion, is that in order to make them real, we have to make them unreal.
What I mean is, no real person can be put in a box and labeled. But to write a character that stands out, we must give that character overarching qualities (labels, even) in order to make that character real and memorable.
When I was in middle school I went on a retreat and we did an intriguing exercise. On the outside of a paper bag we wrote words that described how others thought of us (or how we feel we appear to others). On the inside of the bag we wrote words to describe how we felt on the inside.
I think this is a great exercise to do with our characters. For example, I'm reading The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo right now. One main character, Blomkvist, doesn't stand out to me at all. He's okay but he doesn't capture my interest. The other character, though, is Lisbeth Sanders. She's intriguing.
This is how I think the author made her intriguing.
On the outside of Lisbeth's box (other characters' perspectives or her outward actions) is written Aloof, Cold, Difficult, Smart.
But on the inside is Tender (evidenced by the scene with her mother), Fragile, and Persistent.
What makes a character intriguing is when the outside words juxtapose with the inside words. When they're opposites or don't seem to match.
Which word is on the outside of your character's box? What is on the inside that surprises the reader? Does this theory fit for your favorite character in a movie or book?
What I mean is, no real person can be put in a box and labeled. But to write a character that stands out, we must give that character overarching qualities (labels, even) in order to make that character real and memorable.
When I was in middle school I went on a retreat and we did an intriguing exercise. On the outside of a paper bag we wrote words that described how others thought of us (or how we feel we appear to others). On the inside of the bag we wrote words to describe how we felt on the inside.
I think this is a great exercise to do with our characters. For example, I'm reading The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo right now. One main character, Blomkvist, doesn't stand out to me at all. He's okay but he doesn't capture my interest. The other character, though, is Lisbeth Sanders. She's intriguing.
This is how I think the author made her intriguing.
On the outside of Lisbeth's box (other characters' perspectives or her outward actions) is written Aloof, Cold, Difficult, Smart.
But on the inside is Tender (evidenced by the scene with her mother), Fragile, and Persistent.
What makes a character intriguing is when the outside words juxtapose with the inside words. When they're opposites or don't seem to match.
Which word is on the outside of your character's box? What is on the inside that surprises the reader? Does this theory fit for your favorite character in a movie or book?
Comments
I love this idea. I'm going to have to try it out. I think I tend to do it without realizing it. At least I do it for some of my characters.
My character is confident, secure, and successful on the outside. Inside, she's terrified, sees herself as flawed beyond fixing and timid.
I want to read that book, but haven't got around to it yet.
Jaime, I think it's worth a try.
Me too, Sandra!! I like when one character thinks she/he has a flaw and another one is like, whoa, I love that about you! lol
My hubby & I have been watching the European movies and I do like Lisbeth. I see where you're coming from and couldn't agree more about that juxtaposition.
(I was timid about the books and still am after seeing a few scenes. For some reason what I read really sticks. I guess it sticks even when I watch it, too. Hmmm. Enough thought from me.)
~ Wendy
For my current characters, others see her as spunky with gumption, but her word for herself is throwaway.
Patti, let me know if it works!
Stacy, I haven't tried it yet either (because I just remembered it, lol).
Wendy, I haven't gotten to any gory parts...which makes me wonder what's coming? YIKES! I will say that my co-worker read the book because she wanted to see the movie, but now that she finished the book, she refuses to watch the movie. I guess I haven't reached the "bad" parts yet. *shudder*
My friend recommended the Dragon Tatoo series. I'm hearing more and more about it each day. Are you going to see the movie?
I heard the movie is a bit tough to take. Let us know if you like the book or the movie better.
Now to go find a paper bag ...
A character can act/think opposite to their normal leanings when triggered by threatening circumstances. We're not always consistent in real life.
I'm definitely keeping this in mind with my next WIP. What a wonderful way to write memorable characters. :)
Since I write nf and my characters are mainly me and my family, I'd say people perceive me as compassionate, funny, and wise, but inside I feel impatient, silly, and often confused. Is that too transparent for comfort?
Happy New Year,
Jen
INSIDE her box is deep love, loyalty, tenderness. What givs her the illusion of a lethal killing machine is that she promised her little sister to survive. So, as the reader we see how her love launches her into the violence. On the outside, she's scary.
Going to have to check out 'The Girl...' now because yours is the first comment I've read about liking that character!
I've never heard it said quite like that before, Jessica.
Very interesting way of looking at characters. I totally get it with Virginia's example of Katniss. It seems we should be able to do it with all of the big characters we write, huh?
Right now, I think my character Asha's outside would say "Defiant" and "Strong" and the inside would say "Hesitant" and "Guarded." I know it seems odd, but my character puts up a good front of defiance and strength but deep down, she's really hesitant and scared in what she's doing (standing up against her tyrannical father and brother). It does change as the book progresses though, so that by the end she truly becomes a strong young woman instead of putting up a front.
Does that make sense? LOL
Haven't read The Girl With... Interesting comments here.
Http://banterwithbeth.blogspot.com
cheers,
mood
Moody Writing
Dara, I think it makes perfect sense and it's a good character arc, imo.
Thanks for stopping by, Beth. I'll ck out your post. ;-)
Mood, love the name of your blog. lol
I always learn so much here. Thanks for this post. What a fascinating exercise. I need to try that as I think about my next story.
Happy New Year!
Melanie