Tropes and cliches can be hard to avoid, especially when you’re working within specialized genres or categories. Tom Siddell, creator of the webcomic Gunnerkrigg Court, reminds us why it’s so important to write for yourself:
Sci-fi stories don’t always need spaceships, just like fantasy stories don’t always need swords and sorcery. In fact, relying on popular tropes might be off-putting to readers who already are not fans of a particular genre.
Keeping that in mind, I took elements of sci-fi and fantasy that I enjoyed and tried to present them in original and interesting ways when I started working on the story for my comic. I wanted to explore some of the fun, more obscure European myths, and I introduced those creatures irreverently. In contrast, the robots that inhabit the world of my comic have very spiritual personalities, and live strange, searching, solemn lives. I thought this was an interesting play on typical fantasy and sci-fi conventions.
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“Every character should want something, even if it is only a glass of water,” Kurt Vonnegut said in his Eight Basics of Creative Writing.
A lot goes into developing relatable characters. You have to figure out how they look and behave. You have to have a sense of their back story. But perhaps the most important thing that ties all the character development together is why. Why do they do what they do? What motivates them?
Just like real people, your characters will be motivated by different things. For the story you’re telling, choose one thing to focus on.
You likely won’t mention it outright, but the motivation you pick will be driving your character’s actions and decisions throughout the story.
When your characters aren’t fully developed yet, giving them something to strive for is a fantastic way to begin developing them.
How would they go about achieving that goal? What risks would they take? And why do they want what they want in the first place?
You can easily start a story by taking a character, giving them a goal and watching them trying to reach it. Of course, the problem is that there will be obstacles along the way.
Take the example from the beginning of the post: a character that wants a glass of water. That should be simple enough, shouldn’t it?
They go to the kitchen and take a glass from the cupboard over the sink. The tap sputters when turned on, and no water comes out. Weird.
The character goes to check the stopcock, the water is on. Did they forget to pay the bill? Perhaps there was an incident down the road, and emergency works are going on.
From here, the story can go anywhere from Jason Bourne-style spy thriller to a silly dispute with a neighbour-style comedy. All we started with was a character wanting a glass of water.
Join us this week and spend an hour or more writing a story where the protagonist wants something. Pick a goal or some kind of motivation and use it to develop the character as you work on the story.
If other characters will be working against the protagonist, what motivates them? Why do they stand in the way of the protagonist’s achieving their goal?
Here are a few examples of character motivation:
security — the character’s security is being threatened
success/recognition — the character working hard to achieve something
acceptance — the character wants to fit in
love/friendship — the character is looking for new friends or a partner
Join the challenge
After my extensive [list of questions for towns and cities] for your main setting, there will also be many countries, regions and cultures mentioned in your project, that aren't central to the plot, that you don't have time to delve into detail about, but that still should feel 'real'.
For this use (or, really, in general, if you don't have much time to worldbuild before you start your first draft), I prepared a list with 10 very rough, basic questions to make your world feel alive:
What is their most important export good or economy?
What was the most important event in their recent history, and how long ago did it happen?
What do people from that place wear and how do they style? Are they distinguishable in a crowd?
What is their language, and is it understandable for your narrator? Do they have an accent?
What are they famous for? (People from there, their humor, their food, their skills at something...)?
Are or were they at war / at the brink of war with other people; esp. with those at the center of your story?
What is their most important difference to your "main" / narrator's culture? (Religion, society, economy...?)
Are representatives of that culture seen often in your setting?
What is something outsiders say about them?
What do they say about themselves?
I recommend thinking about these for your side character's home cultures, as well as for your setting's most important regions and neighboring countries. Five or so might even be enough, just as a handy ressource to make your setting feel alive and real.
Por que usted me besa?… Tiene acaso problemas de aceptación o pertenencia?
Qué?… filosofía y sicología con el beso, en teoría aplicada a la realidad?
No me ande besando!
Usted empezó! Yo le besé la frente, usted levantó su cabeza! dijo el amigo en tono ríspido.
Chismoso! dijo ella.
El sonrió y carcajeó, e interpretó el fenómeno como inherente al género, y recordó a su abuelita cuando en la mañana solía traer el chocolate a la mesa con la pieza de pan diciendo “los hombres voltean nuestra cabeza mi hijo, y tienes como dos pensamientos simultáneos rodando y merodeando por las mentes”. Mientras en eso estaba absorto, Helena oye un sonido lejano que le parecía familiar. Un sonido lejano, que parecía acercarse más y más hasta que distinguió perfectamente el lenguaje del búho en la noche, entre los truenos y la lluvia, con un oído afinado que alcanza a descifrar el enigma. Es el buho! Es el buho! se contestó asimisma, e inmediatamente exclamó
Corra, corra! dijo Helena agitada mientras tomaba fuertemente la mano de su amigo al pasar el momento de soledad de pareja, y que instantáneamente los trae, como rayo, a una escena, y presentados en una escenario natural. La obra de teatro natural ya empezaba. Esa es la maravilla de los seres humanos rodeados de todos los elementos naturales: cielo, estrellas, luces, rayos, lluvia, entorno, y en medio de todo, estaban ellos, ellos dos, dos parejas que coincidían en el tiempo especifico para complementar una obra que ya se anunciaba por la naturaleza, y el sonido de los búhos, era sólo el presagio de una encomienda que estaba a punto de ser desenrollada, como una nueva carpeta en una casa vieja, que al girar de su rollo, empieza a cubrir viejos espacios para interponer los nuevos con una mirada más actualizada de la casa.
Corre! Corre! decía Helena, y asía fuertemente la mano de su amigo, y se iban corriendo por los corredores del Paseo del Rio con la lluvia pegando fuerte en sus cabezas, pero sin descansar, mientras del otro lado del rio, otro hombre y otra mujer, también, corrían en lineas paralelas, acelerando en igual sentido, y solo separados por la canal del rio, en el lado opuesto.
Mirala! Ahi esta!, Va corriendo con aquel hombre, dijo Xuxa mientras buscaba un puente de cruce para alcanzarlos. Where is the fucking bridge around here? exclamó Xuxa y al no verlo, se arroja sobre las estancadas agua del rio sin reflejar en su higiene, y Dolman hace lo mismo para llegar al otro extremo del rio.
Que no se pierdan! dijo Dolman, que no se pierdan de vista! mientras sorteaban los botes turísticos, y los transeúntes Del Río empezaban a ver con molestia y enigma cómo dos individuos rompían las reglas de las buenas conductas en una ciudad vibrante. Mientras tanto, Helena y su compañero parecían volar en los corredores y corrían como si trajeran un scooter en un acera de la ciudad, confundiéndose con la muchedumbre del Río, y los otros caminantes sólo sentían momentáneamente los empujones y embestidas de una pareja en prisa. Ven! Y Helena sigue presionando frenéticamente la mano de su amigo. Sabia que si los atrapaban, sabía que si lograban ponerle la mano encima, lo perdería para siempre, para siempre. Lo sabía! Sabía que lo eliminarían de la ecuación….
Los viste dónde se metieron?, preguntó Dolban
Están detrás del árbol, escondidos atrás de el, exclamó Xuxa, mientras encaminaban sus pasos hacia ellos con prisa y tocando, y cerciorándose que tenían los instrumento necesarios para su captura, debajo de sus ropas.
Me quiere explicar que está pasando? dijo su amigo. Y lo besó con un beso ardiente! Quédese aquí, dijo ella, y no salga por ningún motivo, e inmediatamente salió del escondite para dirigirse y enfrentar a sus enemigos. Qué es lo que contiene un beso? Qué extraños poderes trae? Cuáles son los elementos del beso que, como recetas de cocina, se arman buenas comidas en unos comensales dispuestos a disfrutar las alimentos preparadas por los ingredientes de un beso. Por qué el beso, inyecta una potencia en el ser humano, no sólo para identificar una selección, sino también para revestir el cuerpo de una potencia, que todo lo avasalla, por el contacto de dos labios, por las definiciones de una piel, por el sabor de labios entrelazados entre frutas ásperas o dulces, jugosas o secos. Y Helena se dirigió afuera, y ya estaba esperandolos, dispuesta a confrontar el momento. Al otro lado, y contigüo, un restaurante sonaba una canción…. “I come home, in the mornin' light
My mother says, "When you gonna live your life right?"
Oh momma dear, we're not the fortunate ones
And girls, they wanna have fun
Oh girls just wanna have fun
The phone rings, in the middle of the night
My father yells, "What you gonna do with your life?"
Oh daddy dear, you know you're still number one
But girls, they wanna have fun
Oh girls just wanna have
Escritos guardados “En el Taller de Marco”
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I made it to the top! Resumes are not always written in fancy diplomas or degrees, but in knowing how, when, where and why. It's a mixture between knowledge and experience.
I made it to the top
Here you will find some of the things that I really like. I like writing, music, poems, and producing any idea that comes to my mind. I hope you like it!
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