- Laura Backes is the publisher of Children's
Book Insider, the
Newsletter
for Children's Writers. For more information about writing children's
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- Writing for Children: Throw Obstacles
- at Your Characters
by Laura Backes,
Publisher, Children's Book Insider, the Newsletter for Children's
Writers
Successful children's
fiction begins with the main character. Many writers create
a biography or detailed character sketch, listing every physical
and personality trait imaginable, so they have a clear picture
of who their character is. Then they give their main (and important
secondary) characters a list of goals. What does he/she want
to accomplish? What does he/she need to do in order to grow as
a person? The goals must be believable within the realm of who
this character is. These goals are as important in picture books
as they are in novels. How your character reaches his large and
small goals provides the bare bones of plot.
But in order for a story to be really interesting, your character
can't just think of a goal and then effortlessly reach it. As
a writer, it's your job to throw obstacles in your character's
way. By developing obstacles that make sense, you add conflict
and tension to the plot. If you progressively raise the stakes
for your character throughout the story, you'll keep your readers
turning pages to see what happens next.
The first obstacle your character will encounter is that of
the critical situation. This is the point in the beginning of
your story at which the character's life changes. Without this
critical situation, the character's life would have gone on as
before; but with it the character is forced to experience the
story's events and challenges. This critical situation should
relate directly to the character's goals, creating major shifts
in the character's life.
Once you select the critical situation, get out your list
of goals and select several that lend themselves to creating
opportunities for relevant obstacles throughout the story. Some
of these obstacles can be developed into sub-plots.
For example:
* Does the character have to be somewhere at a specific time?
Make him late, or make him miss the appointment altogether.
* Does the character need to find something? Make the search
difficult or fruitless.
* Does the character need to communicate with someone? Have
the note destroyed by weather, stolen by a bad guy, or misinterpreted
by the receiver.
* Does the character need to be alone? Make sure she's surrounded
by people. When developing an obstacle for your character to
overcome, you can examine the obstacle from various perspectives:
1) The character can experience the obstacle himself, or choose
not to experience it, which might result in different problems.
For example, your character may experience bicycle trouble, making
him late to a vital class or appointment, or he may choose not
to participate in a family gathering or holiday celebration.
2) The character can be the victim of the obstacle, with the
obstacle being done to or used on the character, which requires
a reaction from the character (i.e. your character may get ambushed
by the neighborhood gang).
3) The character can witness something which provokes a reaction,
decision or conflict. For example, she may witness a robbery
by the neighborhood gang, but some of the members are her friends
and she must decide whether or not to report the incident to
the police.
Another way of creating obstacles is to ask yourself the
following questions:
1. What could go wrong when trying to achieve or obtain the
goal?
2. Who or what could hinder progress toward this goal?
3. When could things go wrong? Name the worst times.
4. Where could things go wrong? List a location and three
obstacles that could occur.
5. How could things go wrong? List the process or sequence
of events, or the mechanisms involved.
Also think about the obstacle's placement in the story. What
needs to happen before the obstacle takes place so it can have
the most dramatic impact? What should you foreshadow? And what
information does the reader need to make this obstacle interesting
and believable?
Finally, does anything about this obstacle lead the character
into the next goal and the next obstacle? Ideally, the character
runs from one problem to another until finally he either succeeds
or fails at his goal.
Remember, for an obstacle to work it must be logically and
intricately connected to everything else that's happening in
the story. But that doesn't mean it has to be predictable. The
obstacles can be humorous, suspenseful, and above all, surprising.
Then you'll have characters your readers will want to root for.
Copyright 2001, Children's Book Insider, LLC