In my experience, the best key for unlocking the mysteries of your make
your believe world is the characters. They hold all the answers as to how the
world exists and why, because they already live in it — yeah? All you have to
do is start asking them for the answers.
Okay, that sounds a little existential, but I really mean it. If you’re
uncertain about the shape or your world, explore your characters. What’s character
A’s backstory? What does he/she like to wear? Why? How did he/she get those clothes
or that type of spaceship or that particular magical skill set? The more you
answer these questions, the deeper and richer your world will become and the
more it will make sense to your readers.
Your characters will also provide you the level of world-building you actually
need to include in your story. A lot of writers I know tend to skimp on the
world-building in early drafts (myself include). Consequently, my feedback on
these drafts tends to be full of questions on how stuff works and why. A lot of
these questions occur to me because I don’t understand why a character is
behaving a certain way or how they had access to these particular resources,
etc. Which means, that the answer to these questions will come through the characters
themselves.
There are also those writers who love to world-build so much that they
include too many, and usually pointless, details. Again, the solution here is
to stick as close to the characters as possible Would character B, a teenager
sneak thief and orphan, really know the name of the son of the cousin of the
regional governor of Outlandia? Yeah, probably not.
The best visual metaphor I can use for this idea comes from the super-awesome
movie you might have heard of known as The
Avengers. There are many reasons why this movie is so good (the biggest of
which is because it was written/directed by the Geek God of Awesome known as
Joss Whedon), but one of the most critical reasons is because of all the other
movies which came before it. Think of those other movies, Iron Man, Thor, Captain America, as really extensive backstories,
all of which were necessary for The
Avengers to make sense and for the characters and world to be believable.
Do the same with your characters. Answer all the questions, explore of their
reasons for being. And then remember to only include the details that really
matter in your manuscript for your Avengers story.
Happy Writing!
***Originally published at www.mindeearnett.com. You can comment here or there.***
Great post! World building is always something that either draws me into a novel fast and furious or drops me off in the first pages and doesn't suck me in. Emailing you today to figure out how we can work you into the program -- maybe Fall of 2013 instead of 2012? Looking forward to it!
ReplyDeleteGlad you liked it! And fall of 2013 would be fine. I'm up for anything. :)
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