http://www.stephanie-osborn.com
~~~
Barb:
Without characters, you don't have
a story.
I mean, think about it: Who'd
remember the Harry Potter series if Harry Potter wasn't there? Or his buddy Ron
Weasley? Or his other buddy, Hermione Granger? And that's just the good
characters.
No, books are built on characters.
It can't be any other way.
And it's always been this way.
The biggest and most obvious
example, though, is the Bible. There are so many memorable stories there –
stories of Moses, of David and Goliath, of Samson and Delilah, of wise King
Solomon, and of course last but certainly far from least, Jesus of Nazareth.
Most of these stories have narratives we completely understand.
For example, Moses tells the
Egyptian Pharoah that if the Pharoah doesn't let Moses's people go, Egypt will be
afflicted. The Pharoah doesn't listen, Egypt gets ravaged, and finally
after a great deal of suffering, the Pharoah tells Moses to take his people and
go.
Mind, if this particular story wasn't in the Bible, we'd see it as a
story of action, adventure, mayhem, perhaps even as fantastic...but it
works predominantly because we believe Moses is a grounded, down-to-Earth
person who's telling the flat truth at all times. We also believe the Pharoah
doesn't understand who – or Who – he's messing with, so when the Pharoah (and
by extension, all of Egypt )
gets his comeuppance, the reader can clap and cheer. (Or at least want to do
so, which is one reason why the Bible is among the best-selling books of all
time.)
But there's a different Biblical
story I'd like to discuss, and that's the story of Job. He's a guy who
seemingly has it all at the beginning of his story, and is described as being
both "blameless" and "upright." He has a good family, lots
of money, lots of property, is well-respected, and has many friends. But because
his life is so comparatively easy, Satan turns to God and says, in essence,
"Hey, Job has it really easy. I bet he'd not be so good if he had nothing
at all."
God's reply is to cause Job to be
afflicted with a great deal of unnecessary suffering. Job has no idea why he loses
everything, why his family suffers right along with him and most of them die –
all he knows is that God has apparently forsaken him, when Job himself hasn't
done anything at all to deserve this. And all but a few friends desert him, too
– and the few friends left all believe Job must've done something to cause this, even if they don't know what.
Job, though, really is as good as
God said he is. So Job keeps being himself, tries to help others, and while
he's obviously and understandably upset at all the undeserved misery that's
befallen him and his family, he doesn't lash out at other people.
Because of Job's exemplary
behavior, eventually much is restored to Job, though Job never gets a true
answer as to why this happened. Instead, God basically stays above the fray and
says Job cannot judge God – and Job accepts this.
Now, why does much of this story
work, even to modern readers who don't accept that a Deity figure would ever
behave in such a peremptory way? Well, it's simple: We all know people who've
suffered unnecessarily cruel things. We don't know why this has happened.
Often, the ones suffering get hectored by their friends, the same as Job was,
and that just adds insult to injury. And finally, we respect a man who has
shown he truly is good, deep down, in all the ways that count – because anyone
can be a good person when there's no adversity in his life.
But it takes a very strong person
indeed to be good when everything's stacked against him.
In Job's story, we have two main
characters – God, who we can't possibly understand, and who even says so. And
Job, who we definitely do understand
. . . so if we didn't buy into Job's character, why would the story of Job
still be resonating millennia after it was originally written down?
Job's story in particular
illustrates why characterization is so important. Because if you don't have
someone memorable to build a story around (like Job, Moses, Harry Potter, the
Wife of Bath, or my own Bruno the Elfy), what good is the story? Who will
remember it? And why should anyone care?
So when you sit down to write, make
sure your main character – whether he's human, Elfy, completely alien, Godlike,
or many other disparate things – is memorable. Because without that, you can't
possibly interest a reader.
~~~
Well, it seems appropriate at this point to simply say, "Amen"...
If you haven't read Barb's new book, An Elfy On The Loose, by all means, do so!
-Stephanie Osborn
http://www.stephanie-osborn.com
5 comments:
Thanks for having me back, Stephanie. I truly appreciate all your help and support.
Barb
You're most welcome, Barb. I've read your book, it's good, and I think you have a lot of promise. I'm glad to give you exposure!
Very interesting article, Barb and Stephanie! Love this series, I hope it will continue! Hope you both have a wonderful weekend. - Aaron
Thanks, Aaron! :-) Looking forward to reading more of this series, too . . .
Wonderful! I'm so glad everyone is enjoying this series! Yes, I plan for it to go on awhile. I think it's useful for all of us, and our readers, too.
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