Books are many things:
lullabies for the weary.
ointment for the wounded.
armour for the fearful, and
nests to those in need of
home.
Glenda Millard, The Tender Moments of Saffron Silk
Well, I made it through the election, champagne and all. I’ve been working with a historical fiction writer, writing, chopped and simmered another batch of soup–Italian wedding, picked more late-harvest tomatoes, visited an art show that has stayed within me, walked amid the golden colors of this ongoing autumn, and have started shopping for the holidays.
And you, of course, have been writing. Those of you who are immersed in NaNoWriMo, I hope you’re thriving, having some fun, and experiencing creative breakthroughs. Don’t forget about quality protein and outdoor excursions. Oh, and be kind to your back.
Which brings us to storytelling basics and your antagonist. The antagonist is the person who forces your protagonist to change in the way he or she most needs to change. Antagonists are the main force that shape the protagonist’s character arc. They teach the protagonists the lessons needed to grow and they accomplish this via conflict and opposition.
On Day 9 of NaNoWriMo most writers have hit the 10K mark. That means your antagonist is now in play. In some stories such as a romance, he or she is the co-star. Sometimes the role isn’t as important as the protagonist; in some stories the antagonist is a threat so potent that he/she shapes the trajectory and tone of the story. Because high-profile antagonists can run the table. And can be scary badass nightmares.
But let me clarify before we go further: the antagonist isn’t necessarily a bad guy or villain,
though he/she can be. A villain is a subset within the antagonist role, identified by his values, morals, and methods, along with direct antipathy toward the protagonist. He is the most potent threat to the protagonist. A villain’s actions will always have huge ramifications and create hardships and danger. A villain in the story means it has a darker tone and aura.
The main difference between villains and antagonists is that the villain’s presence in the story will always cause fear and apprehension in the reader. If the reader is not afraid of him/her, then the character is not an effective villain. Fear in humans is much more complex and unsettling than it is in animals. It has many degrees, physical reactions, and can be linked with other emotions that are activated while reading. Fear is unpleasant and yet thrilling, and a villain’s role is to stir these emotions to the boiling point.
Here are some suggestions for writing the all-important antagonist:
Introduce the antagonist with flair. From the first words, this character must be memorable, charismatic, and intriguing.
The first quarter of your story sets your antagonist in motion. This means his or her first moves create consequences and a messy aftermath. These actions further push the plot rolling along or set up the rising action–events leading up to the climax.
The antagonist also exists to reveal as much about the protagonist as possible, showcasing the protagonist’s primary traits in events that force him to act in specific ways. So while revealing the protagonist’s flaws and weaknesses, the antics of the antagonist also reveal his strengths and over the course of story events serves as the catalyst that reshapes the protagonist’s self concept. The main antagonists in the Harry Potter series–Malfoy, Snape, and Voldemort– are great examples of this.
The antagonist also exists as a contrast to the protagonist, to provide an opposing or at least different morality, viewpoint, and values. When an antagonist starts messing with your main character, then questions arise: Will the protagonist rise to the occasion, muddle through despite doubts and misgivings, falter, or succeed despite flaws and fears?
The more potent your antagonist, the more you need to know what makes him or her tick. As in backstory, motives, and goals. All need to add up to a seemingly unstoppable, unbeatable force and serious opposition.
You are setting the stage for a showdown or stand-off between the antagonist and protagonist. This is the major component of rising action.
You can create more than one antagonist. A good example of this is found in The Fault in our Stars. It has three: cancer and its grim realities, Peter van Houten, an author who has lost his daughter to cancer and wrote a novel about it, and Augustus Waters who shows Hazel how to love and really live with a fatal illness.
They all force Hazel, the protagonist, to rethink her values, outlook, and concerns. In other words, they force her character arc to unfold.
Stay tuned: The Role of Inner Conflict
Keep writing, keep dreaming, have heart
A few suggestions:
Yesterday there was a break in the rains and I managed more yard clean-up. I tossed out two large hanging plants with relief since I started watering them in May. Still more plants to care for, but they’re blooming away.
I want to recommend another starting place for fiction or as part of your preparations: atmosphere. Now, I’m not suggesting you skip plotting or structure or character development; I’m suggesting you plan for an overall tone and mood from the get-go. I’ve rarely given this advice for a first draft before, but then I started reading Dean Koontz’ Jane Hawk series. And I’ve been giving a lot of thought to why the novels are bestsellers, what works and what doesn’t quite work.
In this thriller series, Jane Hawk, a rogue FBI agent, takes on government agencies including the FBI and a cabal of villains immersed and emboldened in a deadly conspiracy. The stories are dark, brutal, and scary. As you read along, you feel prickly and so tense you’re almost queasy because evil is everywhere. And the more you read, the more you realize how the author is also inserting real-life horrors into the mix. Because we’re living them in contemporary America.
While Jane Hawk spends a lot of time driving across the
country searching for answers, much of the series is set in California. Now California isn’t exactly Transylvania in the dead of winter, right? But Koontz is a writer’s writer, and he makes most settings Spooksville and dangerous. If Jane reaches a haven or safety, it’s always a look-over-your-shoulder situation and she needs to move on, not rest. And she never, ever relaxes. Too much is on the line, including the safety of her beloved 5-year-old Travis.
The story is set in the near-future and the country is sliding into chaos and lawlessness. It opens with deadly terrorism attack in Pennsylvania as the backdrop and citizens countrywide are uneasy and fearful. Here’s a typical setting description as she’s driving.
When the wipers swept the blearing stain from the windshield, she saw the nearby Pacific, storm-lashed and misted, rolling toward the shore less like water and more like a sea of gray smoke pouring off the fires of a nuclear holocaust. The Silent Corner
Throughout the series weather is used in scene after scene, often as bookends. Jane is off the grid so uses public libraries to find information online. From The Silent Corner before she visits a library: Still, the storm had not broken. The sky over San Diego loomed heavy with midday dark, as if all the water weight and potential thunder stored over distant Alpine had in the last few hours slid unspent toward the city, to add pressure to the coastal deluge that was coming. Sometimes both weather and history broke far too slowly for those who were impatient for what came next.
In the park adjacent to the library, following a winding path, she saw ahead a fountain surrounded by a reflecting pool, and she walked to it and sat on one of the benches facing the water that flowered up in numerous thin streams, petaling the air with silver droplets.
This place sounds lovely, doesn’t it? And don’t you wish you’d come up with petaling the air with silver droplets? In case you’re imagining the park as a place or peace or safety, forget about it. Because in fiction it’s especially effective to stage danger in benign or lovely settings.
Let’s check out the same park later when Jane is about to be attacked and needs to run for her life. On the flanking streets to the north and south, traffic passed: grumble of engines, swish of tires, hiss of air brakes, rattle of a loosely-fitted manhole cover, the traffic noise seemed curiously muffled, as if the park were encased with insulated dual-pane glass.
The air remained under pressure, the sky full of iron-dark mountains that would soon collapse in a deluge, the city expectant, the windows of buildings shimmering with light that normally would be faded by the sun at this hour, drivers switching on headlights, the vehicles gliding through the faux dusk like submersibles following undersea lanes.
Jane had taken only a few steps from the fountain when she detected a buzz like swarming wasps. At first it seemed to come from above her, and then from behind, but when she turned in a circle and faced again the grove of palms toward which she had been moving, she saw the source hovering twenty feet away: drones.
Did you notice how the most important word is place at the end of the paragraph? Emulate this small technique. Notice the choice of language: hiss, deluge, collapse, faux dusk, loomed, thunder, grumble, rattle. These words stir reader’s emotions.
And you know what? The big reason this is such a gripping
and terrifying series is because it seems way-too possible. Climate change, domestic terrorism, Russian conspiracies, bombs being sent to presidential critics, Jewish worshippers gunned down in their beloved synagogue–you name it the horrors are too close for comfort.
A small trick you might employ: create a soundtrack for your story that creates the moods you’re aiming for. And then play it again and again.
Stay tuned: Don’t be afraid of potent backstory (more on the Jane Hawk series)
Keep writing, Keep dreaming, Have heart
More rain around here, but I managed to get in a few walks over the weekend including trails at the Hoyt Arboretum, or Portland’s Museum of Trees.
If I could offer a single piece of advice about creating characters it would be this: Take risks with your main characters. Make them stand out from the myriads of novels published each year. And don’t be afraid to allow your stars eccentricities, quirks, and oddball ways of being in the world.
Mostly they need to be memorable. From my book Bullies, Bastards, & Bitches: How to Write the Bad Guys of Fiction
Writing fiction that catches an editor’s attention requires taking risks, especially in writing fascinating characters embroiled in an unbearable situation. When you’re creating your main characters, especially you’re creating a bad ass, keep this in mind: While you’ll shape characters based on emotions and experiences you understand, your characters will always range much farther than you. They will have more adventures and deeper sorrows, their desires will burn red hot, their desperation will cause them to to resort to trickery and deceit, and their failures will bear the mark of doomsday. So, although you’ll understand your characters, don’t impose your own values, thoughts, and beliefs on your cast. Let them range far from the confines of your safe world, allow them to surprise you with their antics and desires, and, if possible, give them beliefs and values quite different from your own.
More questions for your protagonist guaranteed to get your creative wheels turning:
Keep writing, Keep dreaming, Have heart
It’s raining here, but we’ve had the most glorious spate of Indian Summer weather and the amber, lemon, and copper colors continue to bejewel the trees. I’m cleaning up the yard, moving plants, and planting bulbs. And hallelujah, I’m back to cooking hearty food–soups, stews, and a big batch of Beef Bourguignon and mashed potatoes that made me happy to be alive though I still haven’t stepped on the scale.
With November fast approaching thousands of writers are prepping for NaNoWriMo, or National Novel Writing Month. It’s a mad sprint, penning 50,000 words of a story at a frenzied speed while part of a writing community.
If you’re wise you’re already making plans for this mighty effort. I recommend a deep house or apartment cleaning and stocking the pantry and freezer. Stock plenty of protein-rich dishes ready for the days ahead. The kind you can simply thaw or nuke. What else keeps you going? Perhaps chocolate, apples, snacks, nuts, coffee, tea, bottled water, and rewards like an outing that inspires for milestones achieved.
During the last weekend in October, I also recommend that you get acquainted with your protagonist before you plunge into writing a new novel. It’s simple really; if you get acquainted with him or her beforehand, the story will unspool with more ease and speed. Because what the protagonist wants/desires and fears the most (the dreaded alternative) will be at stake in the story.
Now, it’s likely that the protagonist’s needs and goals will shift and grow throughout the story, but you need a starting point of need and imbalance. While you begin with basic dynamics of storytelling, by the time the conflict heats up and things are really hairy, you’ll understand your protag’s reactions and next steps.
In fiction a main character’s needs and motivations create goals. The protagonist’s goals will meet with opposition from the antagonist or another force. The protagonist will struggle to overcome the obstacles. These struggles create conflict and conflict fuels the whole shebang.
Katniss Everdeen: Her dogged path to greatness began the day of the Reaping when she steps in to save/protect her sister Primrose from taking part in the annual and deadly Hunger Games. Leaving home with Peeta, the other Tribute from District 12, she plans to somehow stay alive in the deadly Hunger Games because if she dies her mother and sister will not be able to survive without her. Along the way, she trains, forms an alliance with Peeta, collects allies and enemies, and ultimately fights to protect Peeta’s life too. By story’s end their examples show how remaining true to your principles is most important of all. But never forget that she was also flawed, vulnerable, and misunderstood. In othe words, complicated and relatable.
“Katniss Everdeen’s name booms through me like a firework,” Dhonielle Clayton, author of “The Belles” and chief operating officer of We Need Diverse Books, a nonprofit organization. “A bright reminder of what’s needed to change the world: defiance, irreverence, and stubborn determination. I need to read books by girls like her, girls who weren’t so nice, girls so angry their rage could topple anything in thier path; girls who could face the dark; girls who never could be contained.” The New York Times
Hazel Lancaster in The Fault in our Stars by John Green: Teenaged Hazel has been dealt a lousy hand, thyroid cancer that has metastasized into lung cancer. Her first goal, to please her mother, is accomplished when she attends a support group for kids with cancer. At this meeting she makes friends with Augustus Waters who becomes her first love.
She introduces Augustus to her favorite novel about a girl with terminal cancer and explains she wants to meet the author and understand what really happened to his family. You see, the motivation that drives Hazel is that she needs to believe her parents will be okay after she dies. (spoiler alert) Along the way Hazel and Augustus travel to Amsterdam and meet the author, lose their virginity, and Hazel realizes how much she wants to live.
But Augustus has been hiding a horrible truth: his cancer has returned and he has little time left. Quite a plot twist, isn’t it? Now Hazel needs to somehow support him, cherish their last days together, then handle her grief all the while coping with her own terminal diagnosis. She comes to understand what being a survivor means and that life has meaning no matter what stage you’re at. And she comes to feel more peace about her parents, especially after she learns her mother has been getting a degree in social work.
Luke Skywalker: Skywalker of the Star Wars sci-fi series is a freedom fighter from humble beginnings. His path (and character arc) begins with a restless need to escape his dead-end existence on his uncle’s barren farm. He learns that Princess Leia is leading a rebellion against the Empire and wants to join. He longs to become a Jedi Knight, or fighter pilot especially after Obi-Wan Ben Kanobi, a desert hermit, informs him that his father was a Jedi fighter and he has the ability to harness the Force.
Still reluctant to leave his family, his mind is made up for him when Imperial stormtroopers savagely murder his aunt and uncle. He’s all in now. Skywalker begins training with Hans Solo, then learns the princess has been captured. His next goal is to rescue the princess, which he accomplishes with more than a few swashbuckling moves. This sets up his final, seemingly hopeless goal of taking out the Death Star and ultimately saving the Rebel alliance.
Notice how all these protagonists’ goals powered the story?
So how are you going to get acquainted with your protagonist? There are lots of questionnaires available online to create a physical presence and backstory. I’ve got one here amid my cheat sheets.
But it seems to me that walking along or imagining characters as if they’re with you, their creator, can be one of these best methods of getting to know someone. Especially if you want to learn what makes them tick. Or in fiction speak, their motivations. Motivations stem from a character’s past, basic nature and personality, and compelling circumstances.
Let’s repeat: Motivations create needs which create goals which fuel conflict = story.
Just try it. Step outdoors and plan to walk for at least a mile with your invisible pal at your side. Or walk along as if you’re a method actor and you’re operating from within the character. What would your character notice or remark on? How does he/she hold his/her body? Fast walker? Ambler? Quiet? Hates exercise? Feels most alive when moving? What’s on his or her mind? Distracted or preoccupied? Impatient? Enjoying the weather?
You know those moments in life when you’re walking along with a friend and a profound truth slips into the conversation? Maybe it’s a tidbit or a bombshell or sharing a long-ago memory. We all have wounds and triumphs and failures; and they’re often twined to a character’s internal goals and secrets. Those are the moments, the gold you’re searching for.
And although time is short with November looming, how about a short road trip with your character riding shotgun? Or can he or she tag along when you’re running errands or chauffering the kids around? Have you ever noticed how some people are a delight to travel with and some people are a nightmare? Which one is your protagonist? A nervous, watchful traveler? Open to adventure? Afraid of the unknown? Chatty? Reticent?
Keep writing, keep dreaming, have heart
And thanks for stopping by
The secret of it all, is to write in the gush, the throb, the flood, of the moment–to put things down without deliberation–without deliberation–without worrying about their style –without waiting for a fit time or place.
I always worked that way. I kept the first scrap of paper, the first doorstep, the first desk, and wrote, wrote. No prepared picture, no elaborated poem, no after-narrative, could be what the thing itself is. You want to catch its first spirit–to tally its birth. By writing at that instant the very heartbeat of life is caught. ~ Walt Whitman
No matter where you’re at in your writing career, this workshop will give you insights that create a more nuanced, polished, and compelling story. And it takes place at the Hoffman Center in Manzanita, one of the most charming towns on the Oregon coast. You’ll find the details for payment and registration here.
Crafting a novel is a long, difficult slog even for the most experienced writers. So many decisions and choices, so much fine tuning and revising. Here’s some help: A three-part workshop of specialized techniques for creating a deep, vibrant, and unified story that immerses readers into a vivid world with believable and fascinating characters. The session includes hands-on exercises to help you identify your strengths and weaknesses.
What is the key to creating emotional connections between your readers and your characters? It’s deep viewpoint, the sense that readers are immersed in a character’s life and dilemmas. In fact, the reader becomes the character. We’ll discuss and practice how to eliminate distance, how to dramatize true-to-life emotions, and how to develop an authentic voice.
Part 2: Subtext: The river of emotion beneath the story
Life is often lived between the lines, and scenes often simmer with unspoken emotions beneath dialogue and action. In this session subtext will be explained with examples from various genres. We’ll discuss nonverbal communication and how to render it onto the page and how to hint at lies and secrets in scenes. We’ll investigate various methods to insert subtext—innuendo, gestures, pauses, misdirection, colors, clothing, setting details—in other words, the nuanced moments that are not directly represented.
Part 3: Tension on every page
Fiction isn’t written to make readers happy. Its purpose is to jangle their nerves, make their hearts race, give them goose bumps, and disturb their sleep. We’ll explore the recipe for tension that jabs at the reader’s senses creating a force field and underlying every scene. We’ll discuss how to worry readers by using language, peril, discomfort, prolonging dread, cliffhangers, fish-out-of-water scenarios, time running out, and other elements. Space is limited and reservations required.
November 3, 2018
Hoffman Center, Manzanita, OR
9:30-4:30
$99 Contact Hoffman Center for payment
For what it’s worth; it’s never too late, or in my case, too early to be whoever you want to be. There’s no time limit, stop whenever you want. You can change or stay the same, there are no rules to this thing. We can make the best or the worst of it. I hope you make the best of it. And I hope you see things that startle you. I hope you feel things that you never felt before. I hope you meet people with a different point of view. I hope you live a life you’re proud of. If you find you are not, I hope you find the courage to start all over again. ~ F. Scott Fitzgerald

