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Sunday, October 28, 2007

Character Names II

Did anyone read a fantastic book this week? I'd love to hear your recommendations. Did the names in the book work? Were they great? Why?

After a long work week and I am still focused on the topic of character names. See previous post. What if authors chose different names for the following works. Can you come up with a better name?


In my opinion the following names make a compelling case as to the impact of a well character moniker.


  • Huckleberry Finn

  • Catch 22's Yossarian.

  • Hester Prynne and Roger Chillingworth - The Scarlett Letter

  • Lennie and George - Of Mice and Men's

  • Sookie Stackhouse and Bill from Charlaine Harris' books

  • Thursday Next by Jasper Fforde




Now read A Midnight Clear by William Wharton. Every character has a great name and nickname, too. Or cheat a little and rent the DVD, the film is good too.






Till next week, "Same Sparkle Time. Same Sparkle Day."
















    Sunday, October 21, 2007

    Character Names


    In the TV Show Lost, his name is Sawyer. Rename him and see how that changes the character. Bad boy Ralph, the forbidden fruit she craved. The stubble on Timmy's strong jaw ...."

    Names have power. Names need to fit the setting and the time period. Names put the reader in the character's shoes or pull them out of the story.

    From my website andreageist.com: "I enjoy etymology. As a writer the meaning and history behind a word can add richness and depth and heck it's just plain interesting. My character in the short story Dreams of Summer is named Rayna Engel. If you know any German, Engel is easy = Angel. The origin and meaning of Rayna is varied. In Latin, from Regina, the name means Queen. In Yiddish the name is similar to Katherine, clean and pure. The website Thinkbabynames.com lists the origin as Scandinavian and Israeli meaning: counsel; song. My heroine sings . She always gets the words wrong (great fun rewriting lyrics) and she is a pure soul, a free spirit. I didn't want to name my character Aria or Carol, too transparent. Rayna is the perfect name."
    Character names are important. Example, should your alpha male, sex-god, kick butt and take names hero be called Phillip, Irving, Chance, Billy, Pepe', Jack, Wally or Devon? Does this work?
    "Wally's intense steel-gray eyes made her yearn for the forbidden." Now try a different name.

    Good examples of character names:
    • Charlaine Harris's character Sookie Stackhouse wouldn't be the same if her name was Jane or Sophie.

    • Scout and Boo Radley are wonderful names in To Kill A Mockingbird.

    Do you have examples of well-named characters?

    Saturday, October 20, 2007

    Thrusters


    I picked up a great book on the craft of writing this week. Between the Lines by Jessica Page Morrell takes the writer through the more subtle aspects of fiction writing sometimes overshadowed by the heavy-weight topics of character and plot. Included in this 300 page Writer's Digest publication are topics ranging from epiphanies and foreshadowing to flashbacks and transitions.

    While a cliffhanger is one kind of page-turning device most writers are familiar with, Morrell also delves into the broader category of what she calls "thrusters." These structural devices "push the story ahead, move the action forward, and raise questions or cause curiosity about unanswered issues or things to come." While cliffhangers interrupt the action, forcing the reader to forage ahead for a sense of completion, other thrusters can be more subtle.

    Opening lines, if engaging as they should be to attract the reader's attention, can be thrusters. If action doesn't thunder on the page immediately, the writer can still hint at the promise of action to come and provide setting, exposition or something else to encourage the reader to continue. Other thrusters include scene breaks to change point of view so the reader will worry about the viewpoint character, jumping from place to place or mood to mood to keep the reader's curiosity actively engaged, chases, danger, emotional bombshells, surprises, flashbacks and interruptions. All of these tricks and more serve to deny the reader something in exchange for their unwavering interest in the story.

    One last hint: Always start scenes with a provocative statement, moment or tease. View each new chapter and scene with the same critical eye you gave page one.

    Wednesday, October 17, 2007

    Here Comes the Bribe



    Just thought I'd take the opportunity to do a little blatant self-promo. My first romantic comedy is due out this Spring from The Wild Rose Press.

    You can find me and my book by going to the "Coming Soon" section on the top right hand side of the page. HCB is in the General Contemporary division under its title.

    Thanks!

    Excerpt:

    A single administrative assistant accepts her temporary boss’s offer to masquerade as his fiancĂ©e to keep his matchmaking grandmother out of his personal life and out of the way while he negotiates a high-profile merger for his family-owned company. In exchange, she’ll get the down payment for the loan she needs to keep her ex from selling her condo out from under her.

    But neither of them counted on the lines blurring between real and pretend--or for the temporary arrangement to leave them both longing for something more permanent.

    Monday, October 15, 2007

    Oh our crazy laguage.

    Tonight’s Blog comes from Steven Pinker’s The Language Instinct. I learned something really interesting today. Pinker says, “All speech is an illusion. We hear speech as a string of separate words. But, in the speech sound wave one word runs into the next word seamlessly, there are no white spaces like in text. We hallucinate word boundaries when we reach the edge of a stretch of sound that matches some entry in our mental dictionary.” Crazy you say? So did I. But, think about hearing a foreign language. It is virtually impossible to distinguish one word from another, the words are not in your mental language. He also give some fun examples of sentences that should alike but have completely different meanings. These are called “oronyms”. Here’s a few examples.
    The good can decay many ways.
    The good candy came anyways.

    The stuffy nose can lead to problems.
    The stuff he knows can lead to problems.

    I’m not sure what this has to do with making your writing sparkle but I thought it was interesting anyway.

    Saturday, October 13, 2007

    What is the Sparkle?
















    The Sparkle This Blog asks, "What's the sparkle that makes a manuscript publishable while another languishes in the slush pile for months on end only to receive a rejection?"

    Today, instead of posting an article about writing, I'm asking the question.

    What makes a story sparkle for you?

    What books are 'keepers'? Tell me why they are your favorites.

    The Ordinary World

    Unless you're writing a thriller or an action adventure that begins in the middle of the action, the Ordinary World is an important place to understand. Most writing philosophies and methods, including screenplays incorporate some kind of glimpse at the beginning of a character's journey. Here's why:

    It's impossible to gain the full perspective of a character's arc without seeing where he/she came from, both physically and emotionally. Like a rainbow captured in fragments, we can appreciate its beauty, but can't grasp the full scope--the beginning and end--for the full effect. At the story's conclusion, we must know without doubt the character has developed and grown through the trials of the story. If we don't know his beginning, we cannot appreciate the fully -realized character at the end.

    The Ordinary World is also important for staging the growth of the larger world surrounding the character. This gives the story higher stakes beyond that of the protagonist(s). Not every character has to save the world from a bomb, but audience want to know this character's growth will resonate beyond the micro-world of the story. Think of it as an arc for setting. Maybe, through the events of the story, the town evolves from one of hatred to acceptance or from a closed-mentality to a wider perspective. The larger world doesn't have to be a town. Any group of people defined throughout the story can show the impact of the character's journey beyond the protagonist. If the reader doesn't see the Ordinary World the hero(ine) occupies, the chance for a resonating message at the end is lost.

    Most stories, especially romance, benefit from a less-explosive first scene because it allows us an emotional investment in the character before the inciting incident whisks them along.

    Alicia Rasley teaches an amazing course on beginnings. Find her articles about craft on her website.

    Sunday, October 7, 2007

    8 Female Archetype Examples and The Villains



    Continuing with archetype characterization from the book "Heroes and Heroines: 16 Master Archetypes," by Caro LeFever, Tami Cowden and Sue Viders, I have listed examples of the eight female archetypes. Do you agree?

    My example of the Seductress is Scarlett O'Hara. Is she a heroine or a villain? If Gone With The Wind was Melanie's story, would Scarlett be a villain? Is Melanie a Nurturer or Waif?

    The authors of "Heroes and Heroines: 16 Master Archetypes" also propose sixteen villains and I list them as part of the commentary on archetypes. However, I find the descriptions to be stereotypical instead of archetypal. And of course that is the point of characterization. Both the protagonist and the antagonist need to be fully realized.

    Saturday, October 6, 2007

    Plot Lane Must Turn Right


    Turning points, both main and subplots, are on my mind today. Trying to find scenes that carries enough gravity to form the skeleton of a well-told story is never easy. According to Robin Perini, a successful turning point has all of the following elements:

    1. deep character
    2. a touchpoint of theme
    3. braiding of internal and external conflict (intertwining of plot and character)
    4. layering (multipurpose scenes and multi-dimensional characters)
    5. surprise (the unexpected that keeps the reader turning the pages and reveals character)

    A turning point must change the direction of your plot or subplot and contain conflict, action, emotion and surpise. This surprise can be an event or can merely be a surprise in how a character reacts emotionally, but it must surprise both the reader and the character.

    Like all scenes in the story, the arc within the scene should be well-defined with characters exhibiting "different" behavior or opinions at the scene's conclusion than they had at the scene's opening. This is especially true with turning points. Think Robert McKee's postives and negatives--a literary litmus test to justify a scene's inclusion in the overall story.

    How do your turning points match up?

    To learn more about the power of turning points or her Discovering Story Magic seminars, visit Robin Perini's website.