Writers willing
to talk about themselves often amounts to a literary oxymoron. Many people in this dilemma, like myself, are
introverts who favor staying in the cave writing new engaging tales, or
revisiting the characters they have created who they have come to know as
friends. So I will seek instead to discuss how characters happen, how they come
to life, and how they liberate writers by living daring, dangerous, and even
(gasp) extroverted lives. And I will certainly want to touch on how the process
is therapy for the authors, while at the same time managing to provide
entertainment, discovery, and exploration for the readers.
We create
characters we like, who have foibles, likes, dislikes, and complexity. We learn
the most by what a characters wants. Writers must know a great deal about their
characters, but it is not necessary to put all of it on the page, for that is part
of the reader’s opportunity to discover.
So, here’s
how I went about character development in To
Hell and Gone in Texas.
Al Quinn
and his brother Maury are in their sixties and should be in their golden years
of sharing memories of good times, yet they haven’t spoken to each other in
twenty years. Al has just retired as a sheriff’s department detective and looks
forward to quiet times spent alone in his lakeside home on Lake Travis near
Austin. He plans to go fishing, play chess (though most often with himself),
and listen to classical music. He feeds his neighborhood deer and hasn’t enough
close friends to need the counting fingers of even one hand, yet he is happy
and content with his life. Maury, on the other hand is a mess.
All his
life Maury has been a womanizer, and let’s face it, for someone getting rapidly
older and who already isn’t in the best of health this is a pursuit doomed to
diminishing returns. He is starting to become like the dog who chases cars but
doesn’t really want to catch one, or wouldn’t know what to do with one if he
did. Yet his lifelong wants and desires drive him unthinkingly on. Now, I had a
great deal of backstory in my earlier drafts of this book, scenes that detailed
the two boys growing up that demonstrated how Maury got the way he was. But
that he is the way he is becomes apparent to the reader, so my publisher and I
agreed to trim about ten thousand words of backstory of the growth,
development, and interaction of the boys. This kept the pace of the
suspense/thriller galloping along.
Lest you
think that makes Maury a bit too one-dimensional, a horndog of a brother and
nothing more, consider that he is most certainly facing a future where he is
man whose wants are going to be increasingly less realistic, something he hasn’t
thought about enough. Yet the stark comparison and contrast between Maury and
his brother Al gives the reader the opportunity to watch how Maury behaves and
how he progresses or changes, however slightly. This is part of the path of
interaction and discovery that is part of reading. Suspense readers are tuned
to this and grasp every nuance, and, as Stephen King said in On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft,
“Description begins in the writer’s imagination, but should finish in the
reader’s.”
I will make
an authorial intrusion here to explain that I have a brother who is a year
older, and the germ of Al and Maury’s lives stems from that. But my real life
brother is by no means a womanizer. In fact, he plays the piano and organ at
his church. So I had to apply a little creative juice to let the brothers the
reader sees happen on the page. Okay, a lot of creative juice.
There are a
number of other important characters in this tale, but let me touch on a couple
of favorites. Consider Bonnie, a day nurse from the hospital who agrees to come
to Al’s home to tend to Maury. The fact that her daddy taught her to shoot comes
in handy. I was at a public park watching a nephew play baseball when I saw the
real-world model for Bonnie, just as I describe her. Everything else about her
came from the same creative place as Maury’s quirks.
It seemed
only fair too to bring in Detective Ferguson “Fergie” Jergens, who Al once took
to high school prom, the worst night of his life. At six-foot two and wearing
heels Al spent much of that evening looking up her nose. I’m not exactly
certain where Fergie came from, but from the moment she first walked into the
same room as Al I knew she belonged. Earlier, I mentioned therapy. The way Al
interacts with Fergie, Bonnie, and his brother Maury, all provided me with
hours of free psychiatric-couch therapy about dealing with wants, fears, and
even desires.
Now, the
characters in the Los Zetas killer cell, as well as Jaime Avila, the boss of
the area’s ICE agents, are the kind of animal fierce people in the news each
day as the battle of millions spent by federal agencies competes with billions
made by the Mexican cartels. As the sort of characters they are, they provide
the stark reality that haunts anyone seeking to live a calm and protected life,
while meanwhile the menace creeps closer each day.
You mix up
a batch of characters like this and turn them loose on the pages of a book and
you can have a ripping good time following the adventures of a wide mix of
participants. That’s just the sort of thing I was going for, and what I hope every reader enjoys!
Get your copy of To Hell and Gone in Texas from Amazon US (paper or ebook), Amazon UK (paper or ebook), or Barnes & Noble. And be sure to enter below for a chance to win some great prizes from Red Adept Publishing.
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Get your copy of To Hell and Gone in Texas from Amazon US (paper or ebook), Amazon UK (paper or ebook), or Barnes & Noble. And be sure to enter below for a chance to win some great prizes from Red Adept Publishing.
1 comment:
"hours of free psychiatric-couch therapy about dealing with wants, fears, and even desires." I once heard a writer say he 'worked out his own fears on paper', and I think it makes for the most interesting characters when an author uses writing as a kind of therapy. The reader gets real people, real problems and real solutions. Great post.
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