Channel Button

There are 43 articles on this title. You are reading the article ranked and rated #5 by Helium's members.

Arts & Humanities   >

Writing Tips

Get a Widget for this title

How to create interesting characters

People are multi dimensional, and so should a character in a story be... but that's hard to do when the writer only has a small 'section' of a character's life with which to work.

So how do you write believable characters, who have a past and a future beyond the novel, and have that full range of character development show in only the pages in your book?

When writing a story, you want to have believable characters - characters who seem whole and have full lives outside of the story you are writing. The best way to do this, is for you, as the author, to know your character inside and out.

You need to know the little things:

* What does he like to eat for breakfast?
* What's his favorite color?
* Is he a night owl or an early riser?
* Where was he born?
* How old is he?
* Did he grow up with both of his parents, just one - or neither?

Now, here's the tricky part. Your reader doesn't need to know all this. In fact, if you tried to give your reader all this information, your book probably wouldn't be all that great, because it would really just end up being the life story of one character.

So why do you need to know this information if you aren't going to put it in the book? Because...

We begin to draw conclusions about how people will act and why they act the way they do based on the information we have about them.

With real people in our lives, we do this all the time, whether we are aware of it or not. When we interact with someone, we often have a picture in our mind about how that person is going to relate back to us. We know, from past experience and knowledge about that person, exactly what to expect when we do interact. With a character in a novel you are writing, though, you don't have that past experience and knowledge. Since characters aren't real people, meaning they can't gain life experiences that authors don't give to them, it becomes your job, as the author, to give the character those life experiences.

So sit down and interview your characters. I'm serious! Talk to them, ask them questions, and listen to their answers. Don't try to 'guess' for them what they would do - ask them and let them lead you to the answers. Make your character a whole person, not just someone on the page that will further your plot. Most novelists know that, when in the flow, characters tend to have a mind of their own. When the author lets the novel go and lets the characters play out the plot for them, the writing becomes much more believable.

When you know your characters inside and out - then when the plot twists, you will find yourself writing and saying, "wait a minute, Joe wouldn't do that... that's not how he is..." and you'll catch yourself if you start to write out of character.

Only when you know your characters that well can you write from their perspectives and make a character that will be believable to your reader. We all have a past - our past helps determine who we are and makes up the core of all our experiences and character - and THAT is why we do the things we do now in this present time. Our characters in our novels, unfortunately, do not have a past - and therefore, you, and the author, have to give them one... whether you write it in your story or not. Their lives simply cannot begin and end only on the pages of your book.

A good writer who has believable characters, ones with which the reader can truly relate, even when they tie up all the loose ends of a story, will leave the reader with that vague feeling of wondering.... "Humm, I wonder what ever becomes of Joe?"

236354_m Learn more about this author, Michelle L Devon.
Contact this writer Click here to send this author comments or questions.


Below are the top articles rated and ranked by Helium members on:

How to create interesting characters

  • 1 of 43

    by Paul Lines

    Dull characters will turn viewers away in their droves. Interesting and vibrant characters will have the opposite effect.

    read more

  • 2 of 43

    by Simon Wright

    You want your characters to come across as interesting, realistic and having depth. Rather than just launching into writing

    read more

  • 3 of 43

    by Sandra Elizabeth

    Here are three zoo animals: A gorilla, a kangaroo and a polar bear.




    In order to turn these three animals into characters,

    read more

  • 4 of 43

    by Sylvia Greyhouse

    One of the most important parts (if not THE most important part)of a story is the characters. No matter how outlandish the

    read more

  • 5 of 43

    by Michelle L Devon

    People are multi dimensional, and so should a character in a story be... but that's hard to do when the writer only has a

    read more

View All Articles on:
How to create interesting characters

Add your voice

Know something about How to create interesting characters?
We want to hear your view. Write_penWrite now!

Helium Debate

Cast your vote!

Is the use of "Cliff's Notes" academically honest?

Click for your side.

100501

Featured Partner

Presidential Climate Action Project (PCAP)

The Presidential Climate Action Project (PCAP) has partnered with Helium, giving you the chance to write for a cause....more

What is Helium? | Buy Web Content | Contact Us | Privacy | User agreement | DMCA | User Tools | Help | Community | Helium’s Official Blog | Link to Helium

Helium, Inc.
200 Brickstone Square Andover, MA 01810 USA