Writers should not unload
all the information about their characters in one place in their stories. Readers
do not want to see a who’s who bio for every character lumped together in the
story. By the same token, writers should not pile on all the facts of their
story world at the beginning of their novels or memoirs either. You know; world
history, how devices are used, why things happen, and why it matters to the
world at large. Besides being info-dumps, these methods take away the pleasure
of reading a story.
Let the story
unfold naturally. Don’t answer all the reader’s questions on the first page or
even the first chapter of a novel or memoir. Let the reader care about a person
first. The story needs to unfold slowly as Jennie Nash of Author Accelerator tells her coaching clients. Once the reader connects
with a character, then the writer can explain how the story world affects this
person or family. We are creating a character arc. Characters, especially the
protagonist, should change by the end of the story.
But where do
you place the important material in the story?
The writer
shares the information about his or her characters or the story at large at the
time when those characters would be thinking about how things work in their
world or thinking about their past because it affects the story present, the
forward movement in the story. Many writers know this, but it’s very difficult
to do.
At one point
in my college memoir, the character of Victoria must face her fear of what
opportunity might bring if she wins two prestigious college awards.
In allowing
this story section to unfold slowly, Victoria discovers that what she’s afraid of
are how her feelings toward her family might change if she is awarded an
opportunity to study away from home. This was a dream of Victoria’s when she
was younger. Now she feels she might blame her family, as if it could be their
fault she can’t study just anywhere. She worries about what regret could do to
her psyche. Regret from missed opportunities can be ugly. It makes people
bitter. And Victoria does not want to be bitter—especially toward her family.
This forces Victoria
to face the fact that she could never leave her family for semesters at a time;
never leave her husband with all the work of raising five children and helping their
special needs daughter with her education. Realizing her family comes first,
Victoria decides to apply for the awards, knowing she would only accept an
opportunity that she could use.
This is part
of the character arc of Victoria. She will be forever changed from this point in
the memoir story. She will not sacrifice her family life to live a college
dream of studying away from home. She will find another way to complete her college
education with no regret.
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 allow your story to unfold naturally. Thanks so much!
Please note:
I will not
be posting on Adventures in Writing in July or August 2020. I am moving and
have much to do, especially since I’m still trying to move forward on writing
projects. Don’t know if I’ll be able to keep writing during this time, though. Thank
you for your understanding.
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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hop, click here.
Those details should always be sprinkled in.
ReplyDeleteGood luck with the move. I'll note you will be absent and not cross you of the IWSG list.
Thank you, Alex! And thank you for not crossing me off the IWSG list. This move is crazy. In one house, I'm using boxes to hold lamps. In the other house, I can barely get in the door because of boxes. Yikes!
DeleteThanks for your note here at Adventures in Writing. Have a beautiful summer!
I agree that you shouldn't info dump these details and instead weave them into your story. Good luck with your move.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Natalie! That's the way we should add details in story, but it's not easy. Thanks for your good wishes here at Adventures in Writing for my move. Have a beautiful summer!
DeleteGood post Victoria - I enjoy 'planting' about my characters in dialogue for readers to think about. Hope your move goes well.
ReplyDeleteTony
Exactly how the writing of the story should go, Tony. Bravo! When the story is working for me, I enjoy "planting" the details in dialogue or thoughts, too.
DeleteThank you for your good wishes. I'm going to need them! Thanks for your comment here at Adventures in Writing for my move. Have a beautiful summer!
Such good advice. Wishing you well for the move.
ReplyDeleteHello and welcome to Adventures in Writing, Marian! Thank you so much for your kind words and good wishes for my move. Have a beautiful summer!
DeleteSounds a lot like the show don't tell. Yes, it's annoying when the action stops to explain what kind of coat the character was wearing or what kind of car the character was leaning against, etc. Hoping you have a smooth move.
ReplyDeleteHello and welcome to Adventures in Writing, Susan! Absolutely, the writer shouldn't interrupt the action to describe anything that is not pertinent to what's going on right now in the story.
DeleteThank you so much for your good wishes for my move. Have a beautiful summer!
I try to introduce characters, my like my friends in "real life". I don't sit down the people I'm introducing and do a two-hour presentation with graphs, charts, and pictures. I let them get to know each other gradually, so they can actually enjoy the encounter. ;-)
ReplyDeleteAnna from elements of emaginette
Right, Anna! Don't unload all the details/description in one place. Let the story unfold slowly and thereby the character details bit by bit.
DeleteThank you so much for sharing your writing methods here at Adventures in Writing. Have a beautiful summer!
There's a piece of advice about info dumping at the beginning of a story that I hold onto. Hold off writing the info dumps into the story for as long as you can, and I think that works with your advice as well, because you're saying write the info when it's relevant, same as the advice that continues to resonate with me. Moving is a huge thing, and I wish you and your family an uneventful one. And happy summer!
ReplyDeleteRight, Raimey! Add the information when it is relevant to what's going on in the story at the time the character would be thinking about it. Thanks for sharing your insight here at Adventures in Writing. It's truly appreciated.
DeleteThank you for your good wishes with my move. This is tough! And thanks for your understanding that I need to take the next two months off from blogging to accomplish the move. I hope. Have a beautiful summer!
Great post! Thanks for sharing, and good luck with your move. :)
ReplyDeleteThank you so much, Charity, for your kind words here at Adventures in Writing. They are truly appreciated. I really need the good wishes with this move. Thank you! Have a beautiful summer!
DeleteI hope your move goes smooth. A big change for some people. Thank you for this post. I like that the journey of your character is internal mostly.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Dawn, for your good wishes with my move. Yikes! This is difficult to sell your home and pack up. Yes, I believe stories are internal mostly. It's about how what's happening in your story affects your character[s].
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for your note here at Adventures in Writing. Have a beautiful summer!
A story is just that: a story. And a story unfolds, with information coming out when necessary. Too much and the reader turns off.
ReplyDeleteHello and welcome to Adventures in Writing, Kerry. I agree with you. Too much information at one time definitely turns a reader off. It interrupts the story flow.
DeleteThank you so much for your comment here at Adventures in Writing. Enjoy your weekend!
Not all readers like to wait - it is a lack of attention span syndrome I believe. I love to be immersed in a story, others want to know at the start as much as possible.
ReplyDeleteHello and welcome to Adventures in Writing, Mandy! You know many times, I'm that impatient reader who wants to know--right now--why a character is acting this way or why the story world is set up the way it is. But you are right. Today's reader does not have the attention span to weed through lots of explanation. They'll close the book and do something else.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for sharing your knowledge here at Adventures in Writing. Enjoy your weekend!