Creating Real Novel Characters – Go To The Dark Places

Posted at June 28, 2008 by admin

One of the best writing talks I’ve ever heard was delivered by romance novelist Jennifer Cruisie at the Spring 2003 Writers Retreat Workshop. She gave the same talk again at the Romance Writers of America National Conference later that summer, and it was just as inspiring the second time around. She talked about going all-out in your writing. Digging deep. Living in your story. Bringing your characters to life. And she talked about something I’d never thought about before: going to the dark places.

“You have to go to the dark places,” she said, “to bring the story back to your people.”

What does this mean: go to the dark places?

As a novelist, every story you write, every character you create is part of you. That doesn’t mean your characters are just like you, or vice versa. No one wants to be like their “bad guys.” Half the time we don’t even want to be like our good guys. They’re crazy, going off on all these adventures, getting themselves into conflict at every turn. Who wants that!

Even though your characters are unique individuals and they aren’t exactly like you, there’s a part of you in them. You draw on parts of yourself to create them… even the bad guys. Part of what contributes to their conflict comes from something in your experience, or in your thoughts and feelings.

That’s the icky part of novel writing. Not many of us enjoy dredging up these emotions. Sometimes we don’t even know where they come from, they’re buried so deeply. You’d pay a psychologist good money to walk you through this process, and at least there, you’d be in a safe space! With novel writing, you’re on your own.

To access the proverbial dark places, you need to quiet your mind. You need to reflect on who your characters really are. Draw from deep within yourself to bring them to life. Sometimes writing in a journal, asking one of your characters some tough questions and writing the answers in your character’s point of view is helpful. Talking into a tape recorder, asking questions and answering in your character’s voice can also help you access the dark places.

When you stop liking the answers, when they start to make you feel uncomfortable, that’s exactly the time to keep going. You’re onto something. Resist the urge to protect your characters — and yourself — as the messiness of real life intrudes into your calm fictional world. By allowing your characters to be themselves — their icky selves — you are bringing them to life. You are making them real for your readers. You’re creating a foundation for a novel your readers won’t be able to put down. The characters will live on after the last page is read. Your readers will be back for more.

It’s a scary journey sometimes. If you can bear it, your work will reflect the risk you took in going to the dark places. You’ll reach a level of honesty and vibrancy that will jump off the page. You’ll touch your readers in a very real way. They might not know how or why your work speaks to them so strongly, but they’ll thank you for it. You’ll never know how they might grow from the experience of reading what you brought back from the dark places. That’s what it means “to bring the story back to your people.”

As a novelist, when you succeed once in going to the dark places, you’ll never be afraid to go there again.

Janet Helin is a novelist, writing coach and Christian inspirational publisher. She offers free e-workshops on novel writing, life story writing and Christian inspirational writing and offers free advice to new writers. She can be reached at http://www.lifestoriesinspire.com

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Website Promotion: Alternatives to Article Banks

Posted at May 30, 2008 by admin

Writing and submitting articles to article banks is a well-known method for promoting one’s website. Usually there is an author’s box at the bottom of the article and a link back to the website. This link is valuable in two ways. First, it provides direct traffic from those reading the article to the website. Second, the link counts as a vote to the website when a search engine robot crawls the article. This will help your website rank higher in the search engine results pages.

Article banks (such as EzineArticles.com, ArticleCity.com or GoArticles.com) help Webmasters who need content for their websites as well. Webmasters will come to these resources and pick up articles for placement on their sites, providing valuable content for their own visitors. The only requirement is that the Webmasters keep the author’s box, including the active link, intact when copying the articles.

From a Webmaster’s point of view, they need search no further than the article banks for relative content for their websites. But, for the writers promoting their own websites, there is no need to stop submitting articles at the article banks as other resources are available. First, online magazines may be researched and articles submitted to them directly. Second, articles may be submitted to different online groups such as Yahoo! Groups where all you need to do is sign up as a member and then you can email the article to all members in the group.

The third and perhaps newest method for submitting articles and promoting one’s website can be found at some of the newer sites that are part article bank and part online magazine. Like an article bank, these new sites let writers submit articles for placement on the site and even let the writer create an online portfolio showcasing their work. Like a magazine, some of these sites will pay for content and encourage readers to come to their site to read all the great articles that they offer.

As an example of one of these newer websites, AssociatedContent.com encourages both readers and writers to come to its website. Revenue is generated by the ads that appear along side the articles. Unlike an article bank, the articles are not to be picked up by Webmasters for their own sites. The benefit to writers though is that this serves as another avenue to showcase their work. Writers get to create an online portfolio including an author’s bio page, which will be indexed by the search engines along with their articles for added exposure. Writers at some of these newer classes of websites get to establish themselves as resident experts in their fields, very much like the guides in the About.com model.

So, for those who are looking to write articles and gain exposure for their own websites, the first stop is at the article banks. But, don’t stop there. There are other avenues that can be explored for maximum exposure for your website.

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