This post was co-published at talanhorne.com.
Welcome back to Hints, a miniseries of Mr. Horne’s Book of Secrets.
Let's face it: you didn't become an author so that you could write someone else's book, and the last thing you need is some concerned third party muscling their way into your creative work and seizing the reins.
Yet you're also not Superman. Striking out into this field without any help is too much to ask of you. But you're not so desperate that you need anyone's advice.
What you could really use...is a hint.
"Hints: because you only need a little help."
Yes of course it is. And you're not alone. It's a near-universal experience for new writers.
Let's see if this sounds familiar: you're knee-deep into your story, and you're just a little bit startled at how well it's going. Your ideas are taking shape. You're having a good time with the setting and plot, and you're starting to feel just a little bit confident.
And then you look back at what you've written, and you really try to read it from the beginning, and you notice something....
That's right, you suddenly realize that the story you have been agonizing over for dozens of hours is a boring slog. You can't even make it to the end of the first page without keeling over, comatose, for a day.
So what went wrong?
Well, it can be any number of things, really. Perhaps your story doesn't really have a direction. Or perhaps your narrative is bogged down with needless description. Or maybe there just aren't enough dynamic events happening to engage the reader.
But most of the time, the problem lies with your characters.
If the characters are not interesting then nothing they do, no matter how explosive, will be enough to hold the reader's attention. If the character is a stranger we know nothing about, then it really doesn't matter what happens to them. More importantly, if the reader cannot form an opinion about the character, then they have no reason to exist.
And that is one key that bears repeating: the narrative strength of any character is directly correlated to how easy it is for the audience to form an opinion about them.
Naturally, there are many ways to do this, with the most common answer being that you need to make the character relatable. For, according to conventional wisdom, if the reader can see themselves in the character, that is the best way to get them to care about the character's fate.
Not diametrically wrong, of course. The thrust of its argument is in the generally correct direction.
But it's dangerous to assume that relatability is the only way to make a great character. And to make such an assertion obscures the real law of character development, because why should you settle for the approximate truth when the genuine article is available?
Because the real way to ensure the audience cares about a character is to make that character do things the audience cannot feel neutral about. That may, in some cases, involve the character doing something to make them relatable, but not always.
For example, most people will not relate to being a bank robber. Yet bank robbers make compelling protagonists, simply because as soon as the reader finds out that a character is a bank robber it is impossible to have no opinion of them. The resulting opinion may be good, or it may be bad, but it is always captivating.
Which brings us to the real takeaway of this whole exercise.
Inasmuch as this blog post is a hint and not advice, it make sense for me to cut to the chase and give you the life-hack version of making interesting characters. And that life hack is called "evil".
A great deal of fiction focuses on the problem of evil. Evil is intractable. It has no easy answer but always lends itself to great and terrible consequences. And because of that, it never fails to be interesting.
A simple exercise that guarantees the creation of interesting characters is this: whenever creating a new character, ask yourself, "In what way is this character a bad person?"
No. That is most certainly not what I mean.
Because a fault is not necessarily a sin. EVERYONE has faults, but not everyone is a bad person. And while sins can only be deliciously interesting, character faults can conceivably be mundane and weak.
Take, for example, the following faults:
All these faults keep the character from being perfect while adding nothing to their appeal. Because a faulty character who is still a good person is not strong enough to drive a narrative.
But suppose we take the above faults and turn them into all-out sins. Watch what happens:
And here's the thing: any of the above characters can be the hero of your story. Villains do not (and I dare say, should not) have a monopoly on evil. It should instead be part of your recipe when designing every character in your repertoire.
Using evil as your guide gives you a head start that most amateur writers don't know about.
Though I don't often invoke the Bard on my blog, his example is helpful for this particular hint.
All of Shakespeare's characters were bad people, including his heroes. The most admirable among them was still subject to their own favorite vices---a fact which his villains are all too quick to capitalize on.
Iago is scheming traitor, but Othello is a jealous and unforgiving lover. Caliban is an uncivilized animal, but Prospero is a cruel and manipulative master. Brutus is treacherous and ungrateful, but Caesar is arrogant and narrow minded.
And while "Shakespeare did it, so it must be good" is hardly an airtight argument, we can see how his work benefited and was enriched by removing all pretense of saintliness from his characters, whether they be the ones we're meant to root for or the ones we're meant to despise.
And I would hope that anyone who reads this hint will see how it applies to their own writing.
Fiction is about bad people. It has to be, because if they're not bad, then they're not interesting. This holds especially true for heroes. Heroes are mischievous. They're often up to no good. At some point, if the story is any good, your hero will do something naughty.
In which case, if you nail down your hero's personal sins before you even start writing the book, you will be so much the better off when establishing his character and slowly building him up to those transgressive moments when he does naughty things, making his overall development that much more natural and organic.
It may seem like a stretch, but believe me when I say it will make your stories a thousand times more dynamic and eye-catching. And in a field as competitive as fiction, you need all the advantages you can get.