What Does Your Character WANT?
"What does your character want?" It seems like a simple question - yet it is one that can cause untold problems for some writers. They fuss and fiddle about with all manner of MINOR things that the character wants, and totally miss the big one!
You have to ask yourself these questions to find out what it is that will propel your plot forward, through page after page; chapter after chapter. If you don't know what your character wants, then you are going to have trouble keeping your story on track. It is WHAT WE WANT from life that keeps us going. Not convinced? Okay, sit back and consider your own life. Let me ask you a few questions.
And so it goes on. You can apply any one of a number of scenarios to the question: "Why do you want to...????" and the answer will tell you what drives you. Now take what you have discovered and apply it to your characters. They don't do things in a vacuum. Your characters have to be motivated to do things for a good reason, or your book lacks life and direction. In a recent three-day workshop, Robert McKee (author of STORY)said: "...most stories these days lack structure. To avoid this, the protagonist must WANT SOMETHING. It's easier if it's tangible - the sparkling new office and promotion, the missing child, the golden chalice, but intangibles work too - a sense of worth, revenge, a sense of belonging. So work out what you protagonist wants! Once you've worked it out, you're well on the way to writing a great story. This goal drives the final climax of the story." Let's hear from someone else: Donald Maass, author of FIRE IN FICTION. Don says "In many manuscripts the protagonist's motivation is shallow. We do not belive that the protagonist is driven to action, and often the action to which the protagonist is driven is less than it could be. Pump up the motivation. Pump up the response." Some "What Does My Character Want?" Questions to Ask:
If necessary, take a whole day to think about this. Take a week. Take a month. It's that important. © copyright Marg McAlister 2009 |