Authors, Writers, Publishers, and Book Readers
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First of all, it's great you started a new discussion!!! What I have found in reading is, many writers use the same characters with different names, which is understandable. I know, when writing, one can be moving so fast that we loss sight. Character defects. I mean really, are we all perfect!!! Nor are our characters. Tailspinning characters, to me means, not to make them perfect. However, I might be looking at yoiur question the wrong way. If you're talking about story, I write mystery, the story has too have many tailspins. I believe, not only to leave each chapter hanging, but also each paragraph and sometimes each sentence. Keep the reader guessing, Always!!!There's a word publishers don't like (Always). Great topic...
Great question, Anna. Back in the day when I taught fiction writing, I would suggest that the best stories grow out of situations in which the character is horribly mismatched to the challenges s/he will face. For example, how much more intriguing might it be if Woody Allen were thrown into a situation where he had to use his physical prowess to save the world instead of throwing Sylvester Stallone into that situation one more time? Also, that gives my characters a chance to grow & change through the course of the story, which I feel makes for more compelling reading, as well.
And like Robert, I am drawn to deeply flawed characters. In the book I'm finishing up now, the main character is bi-polar and has an on-again, off-again relationship with the truth. As she says in the first chapter, her life is so far in the toilet the Roto-Rooter man couldn't help her. I love the fun of seeing if I can evolve a character like that into the "hero" of a story.
Love this discussion. Thanks again.
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