We’re going in-depth into characters this year, using Orson Scott Card’s Elements of Fiction Writing: Characters & Viewpoint. You can get the book from Writer’s Digest. And you can read our earlier posts on characters here:
- Inventing Characters: A Character is What He Does, His Motives, and His Past
- Belief, Emotional Involvement, Clarity: What Every Character Needs
- Writing Characters: Digging Beyond Life
- Writing Characters & Making Decisions: "What Kind of Story Are You Telling?"
Now, onto this new lesson per Mr. Card.
"Not all characters are created equal"
You know stories have major characters and minor ones. But are you aware of the three levels of character importance?
1. Walk-ons
These are the characters that show up for a single scene and then disappear. The pizza delivery man or the postal delivery person, both who deliver and leave, unnamed and never to be seen or heard from again.
These are background people, much like scenery. They help you flesh out your novel with a bit of realism or they have a simple function to perform. And then they’re gone. Readers don’t think of them again.
Walk-ons are usually stereotypes. This is the one time a stereotype fits. However, when you create a stereotype walk-on and give them an eccentricity, you’ve elevated that character in your readers’ minds. They’ll expect to read more about them. So for walk-ons, stick to the stereotype and move on, and they’ll disappear into the scenery.
2. Minor characters
Minor characters have a small part to play in your novel. They may affect a plot twist, but your readers don’t get intimately involved with them, evoking neither good nor bad feelings. They play their part and then mostly vanish from the pages. You might learn a little about their desires and actions along the way, but once they’ve fulfilled their purpose, they’re gone.
Minor characters usually have an eccentricity that you exaggerate to make readers notice them. But you don’t want to create depth in this character; you don’t want readers emotionally invested in them. And you don’t start the first scene of your novel with a minor character because readers will expect him or her to play a much larger role.
3. Major characters
Your protagonist, antagonist, even the main character’s best friend, sibling, or mentor are people we either love or hate, depending on how you draw them. We understand them; we know where they came from and what they want most in life. The story is about them, and you must wrap up their story threads at the end.
A main difference between major and minor characters is how much time you spend on them. Introduce main characters in the first scene of your story so readers can discover your cast and invest in them.
Here’s what sets apart your major characters from the rest:
- They have choices that affect the other cast members.
- The focus is on them a good part of the time.
- They frequently appear in scenes.
- Their actions affect the plot.
- They evoke sympathy.
- The story is told from their point of view.
So where do you draw the line between these three levels? You don’t. The line blurs. Let’s look at an example.
Aaron and Renee are the main characters of your story. The story is about them, and readers follow them through trials and plot twists. But Renee’s business partner, Mallory, plays an important mentor role, so your reader gets a little invested in her. And Aaron’s brother, Greg, and his boss, Scott, are also fairly major as they help Aaron and Renee through some of their trials and tribulations. Then you have quirky players your readers will certainly remember, like the yogi trash collector who spouts Zen affirmations as your characters leave for work every morning. And there’s Amy, Renee’s secretary at work, who is minor, but somewhat important.
The three levels are not black and white; they shade into each other. But trust that your readers are savvy enough to consciously or unconsciously rank them according to the order above.
How to make readers care about your characters
Now let’s get down to the details. To hook your readers, you need to make them care about your characters. And the more tension you generate and emotions you evoke, the more attention your readers pay.
In a nutshell: raise the stakes to make readers love or hate your main characters. Let’s look at ways to ratchet things up.
Suffering
Suffering pain can be a physical or emotional sensation. Consider how physical agony and immense grief can suck your readers in. Not that they will feel the character’s suffering, but it intensifies what the reader feels. You want readers to sympathize when the main character suffers a setback or cheer when he or she defeats the antagonist.
Raising the stakes through your characters’ suffering requires a level of degrees. Intense physical torture is hard for a reader to take for long passages and is best kept brief. You want to evoke physical and emotional suffering somewhere in between the trivial and the overly ghastly. And the more you repeat physical or emotional suffering, the more it loses its effectiveness. When pain and grief become unbearable, you lose your audience.
The key is to not focus solely on the suffering, but rather to show its cause and effect. Orson Scott Card says, "If your characters cry, your readers won’t have to; if your characters have good reason to cry, and don’t, your readers will do the weeping."
Sacrifice
When your main character decides to sacrifice him or herself either physically or emotionally, it can evoke intense emotions in readers. She has self-chosen to suffer for the greater good. On the flip side is when your antagonist willingly causes pain on another character. It evokes sympathy for the victim and loathing for the antagonist.
Deliberately causing pain or sacrificing someone else can make an antagonist stand out even more memorably than your main character.
Jeopardy
It used to be that writers would put their characters in untenable situations that raised the stakes, but were in the end overcome. Think about the damsel in distress tied to the railroad tracks. As a reader, you know she will be saved, and so it has lost its effectiveness. But when you as the writer show that your antagonist means his threats by having him carry one out, you’ve just raised the stakes exponentially.
Sexual tension
A nice romance thread in your story can raise the sexual tension to an almost unbearable level. When your reader encounters male and female main characters, they expect sexual tension, so you better deliver. The more you can ratchet up the anger, contempt, or rivalry between these two, the more intense the sexual tension.
Realize that when your characters finally come together, that tension dissipates. It’s hard to sustain sexual tension for the long haul.
Signs and seers
Wuthering Heights is full of storms crashing and raging across the moors, underscoring the turbulent mood of its main characters. Your signs and seers don’t have to be cataclysmic or quite as intense. Not every storm must rage for a reader to get the effect; sometimes drizzle works just as well.
The Immortalists by Chloe Benjamin uses a relatively minor character, a fortune teller, to create an almost unbearable tension for the story’s four main characters. Read the book to see how deeply affected their lives are after a single visit to the seer.
Conclusion
Crank up the stakes. Use these techniques—subtly and deftly or almost unbearably—to grab your readers by the emotional coat-tails. And don’t let go until the end of your story.
What’s the most memorable high stakes you’ve created for a character? Let us know in the comments below.