Getting the reader to care
about your protagonist is important to the success of your novel or memoir.
Yes, the action of the story is important, but if the reader doesn’t care what
happens to your protagonist, the story falls flat.
People care about people or any thinking creature you
create. But they need a reason to care. Lots of things can happen in a story.
We as writers need to make the story personal by telling the tale of one
specific person. The reader needs to see how what happens in the story affects
one particular character. Make the story specific to someone the reader cares
about.
But how do we do that?
How do we get someone who doesn’t know our characters the way we do,
care about what happens to them? Now I’m not saying that I have all the
answers. Wouldn’t that be nice? I wouldn’t need to struggle to get my own
stories down on paper if this were simple.
Let’s start by asking a few questions.
Who was this protagonist before the inciting incident,
before the story present? There’s a broad question. Rein it in and try and
think of answers, or scenes, that relate to your story situation or problem,
both internal and external. What type of family or friend relationships did she
have? Were these relationships important to her? Why?
Think about your protagonist’s profession before the story
began. Why did she choose that profession? What were her beliefs at that time?
Why did these things matter to her?
Whatever the internal problem is in the story, how did the
protagonist come to deal with that problem? What happened in the first place to
make her believe in this internal problem?
And most importantly, how did those around the protagonist
feed that internal problem?
If we look at my college memoir, how did Victoria go from
having trouble in third grade to not going to college?
Think in scenes or summary:
Victoria struggled throughout elementary school.
Victoria did better in middle school and wanted to sign up
for college prep in high school.
Victoria’s father didn’t think she was capable of college
work just because she was on the honor roll by middle school.
Victoria took secretarial courses in high school to be a secretary like Mom and friends.
Victoria’s siblings did not go to college either.
How did Victoria meet her husband? Where did she work after
high school? Did she consider going to college after getting married?
No. She still believed she was that girl her
father claimed was “not college material.”
How about after having a few children? Did she consider
college then?
Nope! She was knee deep in babies and running
the home to consider college.
Didn’t Victoria struggle with her inferiority before
attending college as an adult?
All the time. She saw herself in her learning-disabled first
born. Victoria struggled to help her daughter with her education and therefore
her younger children as well. But she felt totally inferior to those
college-educated people in the public education system.
There are more questions to ask to explain to the reader
who Victoria was; how she got that way; and why it matters in her life. When I started
writing my manuscript, I didn’t believe these questions were pertinent to my
college journey, my memoir story. But they are!
As a writer, you are looking for personal information about
your character to answer these questions. Readers are inquisitive. They want to
know what makes your protagonist tick. Why she believes and acts the way she
does in the story present. Good things, bad things. The reader wants to cheer
for your protagonist as the story moves forward. We want readers to care what
happens to her. Win or lose. Readers want to care about someone specific.
Please ask any questions about my college memoir and share
any insight you may have in the comments section of Adventures in Writing about
how you get readers to care about your characters. Thanks so much!
And thank you
for visiting Adventures in Writing. Please follow my blog if you haven’t
already and connect with me online. Leave
your blog link in the comment so I can be sure to do the same for you. To
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That is a great list! Most of it will never end up in the story, but it gives us a good sense of who the character is and a list of clues we can insert for the reader.
ReplyDeleteYes it does, Alex. Thank you so much for sharing your insight here at Adventures in Writing. Have a beautiful weekend! Be safe!
DeleteGreat list of ideas and brainstorming.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much, Anne. I truly appreciate your note here at Adventures in Writing. Have a beautiful weekend! And be safe!
DeleteSo true that we have to care about the protagonist to get into a story. You have a lot of great questions that can help us all know our main character better.
ReplyDeleteI believe the protagonist is the heart of the story, Natalie. Thank you so much for your kind words. I truly appreciate them. And thanks for your note here at Adventures in Writing. Have a beautiful weekend!
DeleteBackstory is something I sometimes end up light on, and it's definitely something I need to work on. I think I want it to happen organically, but in every other way, I'm more of a plotter, so why am I making excuses for myself and backstory? :)
ReplyDeleteBackstory needs to unfold when the protagonist would be thinking, or connecting, something that is happening in the present to what happened in the past. You are right, Raimey. It needs to happen organically in the story. But it truly is difficult to do.
DeleteIt's always a pleasure seeing you here at Adventures in Writing. Thanks so much for your note. Enjoy your weekend!
Forgot my link...https://raimeygallant.com/2020/04/14/howtofillmotivationholes/
ReplyDeleteThanks, Angel! Luckily, I can always find you on the web. I truly appreciate when you wonderful followers/commenters leave a link in your comments. It helps me find you to read your blogs.
DeleteAn excellent list for any writer. Thanks, Victoria!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for your kind words, Joylene. I truly appreciate them. And thanks for your note here at Adventures in Writing. Have a beautiful weekend!
DeleteI agree it is key to draw in the readers with a character they can relate to. Thanks for the information.
ReplyDeleteAnna from elements of emaginette
My pleasure, Anna. Thanks for your comment here at Adventures in Writing. Have a beautiful weekend! And be safe!
DeleteAlways appreciate a brainstorming session, thank you Victoria!
ReplyDeleteThank you, S.E.! And thanks for your note here at Adventures in Writing. Have a beautiful weekend! Be safe!
DeleteGreat post! I love thinking about characters backstories, and I've put down so many books because I couldn't connect with the MC. Thanks for sharing! :)
ReplyDeleteAnd we don't need to have the same background as the MC to be able to connect with them. We just need to see the humanity in them.
DeleteThank you so much for your kind words, Charity. I really appreciate them. And thanks for your comment here at Adventures in Writing. Have a beautiful weekend!
I'm reading Plot Versus Character by Jeff Gerke. He says the same as you have above. Thanks again for posting.
ReplyDeleteInteresting, Dawn! I'll have to check out his book. Thank you so much for sharing this with the followers of Adventures in Writing. Have a beautiful weekend! And be safe!
DeleteA great guide to building characters. Thank you
ReplyDeleteHello and welcome to Adventures in Writing! Thank you so much for your kind words here at Adventures in Writing. I truly appreciate them. If you can, please leave a link where I can find you on the web. Enjoy your weekend!
DeleteHi Victoria - that was thorough ... we all go through challenges and special times in life that could so easily be teased out to help with fleshing out any characters we write ... we also need to let the reader build a bit of their own into the character. Well done - great reminder on how we need to bring caring for our characters into our writing - take care and all the best - Hilary
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for sharing your insight here at Adventures in Writing, Hilary. And you are right. It helps connect the reader to the protagonist if the writer allows for some personal connection between their character and the reader. Have a beautiful weekend! Be safe!
ReplyDeleteYou always make good points, Victoria. The result is that I often question my own memoir as I realize I might not have dug deep enough based on your suggestions and knowledge. :-) You are definitely putting way more thought, practice, and prep work into your college memoir than I ever did in my travel memoir, which doesn’t seem to go anywhere at the moment... Have a nice weekend!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Liesbet. God, I hope this college memoir goes some place. I’m spending so much money on getting it right. Only time will tell.
ReplyDeleteAs for your travel memoir, it definitely has substance. We may need to look for the through thread, that’s all. But it is truly interesting. Never lose sight of that, my friend. It's always a pleasure seeing you here at Adventures in Writing. Be safe and have a great weekend.
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Hello and welcome to Adventures in Writing, Yumaidar! Thank you so much for your comment here at Adventures in Writing. I'll check out your website. Enjoy your weekend!
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Hello and welcome to Adventures in Writing, Uda! I'm so glad you stopped by and left a note. It's greatly appreciated. Thank you for your kind words.
ReplyDeleteI'll check out your website. Thanks again for your note here at Adventures in Writing. All best to you!
Hello and welcome to Adventures in Writing! I'm so glad you stopped by and left a note. It's greatly appreciated. Thank you for your kind words.
ReplyDeleteI'll check out your website. Thanks again for your note here at Adventures in Writing. All best to you!
Yes, Victoria! Thanks for sharing this post.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for your kind words here at Adventures in Writing. They are truly appreciated. All best to you!
DeleteThis post resonated with me. Thank you for sharing.
ReplyDeleteI'm so glad. It's my pleasure to assist fellow writers. Thank you so much for your kind words here at Adventures in Writing. All best to you!
ReplyDeleteHello and welcome to Adventures in Writing! I'm so glad you stopped by and left a note. It's greatly appreciated. Thank you for your kind words. Have a beautiful day!
ReplyDelete