The Process
*Coach Saban voice*: It’s about
the process.
No, but, really, it is. Writing a
book is a lengthy process that comes with a whole host of organizational and
mental challenges. They take months to conceptualize, complete, edit, proof,
and then publish; there’s no such thing as instant gratification and it can
become discouraging along the way – it often does for me. It’s hard to spend
six, seven, eight months, sometimes a year on a manuscript wondering the whole
time if, businesswise, it will have been worth all the early mornings and
sleepless nights. Everyone has their own process, and that’s what sustains you,
50k words in and afflicted with hopelessness.
I thought I’d talk about my
process, in a series of connected posts, from conceptualization to editing.
Conceptualization
Everything starts with character
for me. My motto is “Character first.” All my past attempts to begin mapping a
story based on a concept have failed – I think probably because concept is the
least important part of any book I read. A trope is only so good as the author
wielding the keyboard, in my opinion. It’s all about characters who feel real
and knowable.
Historically, I’ve always been
someone who latches onto a secondary character in any story. I usually like the
main character well enough, but it’s the sidekick who fascinates and inspires
me most. Plenty of stories have been told about “main character” types, with
their good looks, and strong convictions, and clearly-outlined quests.
Literally everyone writes about “alpha males.” I have no interest in that. I
have a few kings and leaders thrown into the mix, sure, but even then, I’m not
approaching it from the “alpha” stereotype – unless you count all the
werewolves: that’s really the only time I use that word. I prefer the damaged
and the weird, and those just trying to get by. Those with demons. Those who
aren’t trying to change the world, but perhaps manage to do so anyway. When I
write a king – Erik, Richard, Vlad – I have to know one thing, first, and it’s
something I have to know about all my characters: where are their vulnerable
spots?
With any character, I have to
know what they want, what they’re willing to do to get it, and what makes them
vulnerable. What do they fear? Where are their limits? How far will they go?
How cruel are they? What wakes them at night in a cold sweat, heart pounding?
What sight makes them smile? When do they feel quietest, most at peace? I find
it’s the things people don’t advertise about themselves that are the most
important traits when crafting a character.
In the case of a historical
figure, it’s even more of a psychological exercise. Tell me a guy killed his
own nobles and impaled his POWs, and it’s my job to try and crawl inside his
head and figure out the lines of thought that led him to these actions. When
reading historical texts, the authors often say they “cannot speculate motives,”
or they simply don’t want to, and I respect that. I don’t like when an author
couches an opinion as fact, when there’s no way any of us can truly know what
went on inside someone’s head centuries ago. But I’m a fiction author, so I get
to play, and that has been both nerve-wracking and a heck of a lot of fun.
When it comes to
characterization, my goal is always to paint a complete portrait of the central
protagonists. My characters don’t merely exist in the moment of the story; I
don’t just drop them in and “get on with it.” Each character’s personality and
actions are informed by their childhood, by their family, by their experiences
and traumas. I incorporate this by weaving in little nuggets of the past; I employ
large-scale flashbacks, yes, but also love to layer little anecdotes from the past
as a character is experiencing an event in the present. Here’s an example from The
Wild Charge:
Five years
ago, a man named Benjamin Ruse had approached a woman in a pub in London.
Younger than her, too young, really, barely out of school, but tall, and
blue-eyed, and gorgeous. The lights had gleamed off the product in his hair,
and off his smooth, high cheekbones, his fine, poreless skin. He’d leaned up
against the bar beside her, and given her a look, one wiser and more
experienced than his age would have indicated.
He’d bought
her next round, and then the next.
She’d
twisted her ring off and slipped it into her purse in the cab ride. Poured them
more wine when they got to the flat…and never saw the granules he slipped into
her glass when she wasn’t looking.
Her
husband, an important member of parliament, arrived home after eleven to a dark
flat. When he clicked on the lamp, he saw his wife laid out on the sofa, asleep
– and a strange man in the chair. His favorite chair.
And a young
man, at that. He’d grinned, a fast slice of white teeth in the dim lamplight.
“Hi, honey, welcome home.”
Benjamin
Ruse had made two other appearances: once on a horseback riding outing with a
Saudi prince, one he then wound up in bed with, and took some extremely
compromising photos of. And the last time in an elevator in Hong Kong, where
two British officials had arrived on their designated floor sprawled atop one
another on the floor of the cab, strangled to death.
Tenny had
always considered it his favorite alias. Benjamin Ruse was suave, and
sophisticated; charming to men and women. And Ruse was especially fun to say,
knowing the word play at hand. It was the name he’d given to Ratchet when he
first arrived in Knoxville, and found himself in need of a believably fake
driver’s license, in case he ever got pulled over in a routine traffic stop, or
wanted to buy beer, or get into a club.
But he
hadn’t had a name, then.
Ratchet
spun away from his laptop, a small, shiny plastic card in one hand. He scanned
it, frowning to himself.
Tenny
resisted the urge to fidget; he’d never been a fidgeter before, in his
pre-name, only-a-number life. Lots of things were changing; the chaos of that
infuriated him…even though, when he allowed himself to admit it, he didn’t want
to go back.
I could have told you Tenny had a
favorite alias, but I was after the imagery, the understanding that this longer
scene imparts.
I’m keenly aware that this is a
writing style that doesn’t resonate universally – some readers want to trim the
story down to the base essentials of what is happening in the present day – but
I love that intricate dovetailing-in of context. Mercy recalling his “daddy’s”
strength as he hauled a thrashing bull gator up into their little boat tells
you so much more than just saying “Mercy was very strong.” It gives you an image.
It tells you “this is a man who was once a boy who slayed literal dragons, and
he’s not afraid of any man.”
I plan to expand on this in my
post about my actual writing process, but for me, writing the plot of a
narrative is inextricably linked with characterization. It’s a personal
preference, when reading and writing, and I attribute this to my love of the
Romantic period in English literature, and to my Southern roots. Southerners
tell sprawling stories that give you an abundance of sidenotes and background. The
late great Pat Conroy, for instance: while I have my quibbles with his work, there’s
no denying the magic of his prose, and the weaving of past and present in each
of his books. Or Anne Rivers Siddons. They weren’t showing a slice of life, but
a whole life, and that’s what I love most about fiction-writing. I want to show
you glimpses of the whole person, childhood to old age.
I certainly have favorite
character archetypes – I love gremlins and showmen; cold, hard girls and girls
who know when it’s smart to lay low and listen; deeply-flawed leaders and their
much more practical seconds. But I can’t control who pops into my mind and
demands to have his or her story told. If I could, I’d probably be much more successful
at this whole publishing thing 😉
Next time, it’s all about
narrative and prose.
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