Inventing Characters - Where Do They Come From and How Do You Make Them Live?
Every writer faces the same quiet moment. A blank page. A flicker of an idea. Perhaps a setting. Perhaps a situation. Perhaps just a mood. And then the real question rises. Who is this about? Inventing characters is not about assembling traits like parts in a kit. It is not about choosing hair color, profession, and a quirky habit. That might give you a silhouette, but it will not give you a person. A character becomes alive when they begin to want something, fear something, believe something - and when those internal forces start to shape their behavior. So where do characters come from? They come from observation first. From paying attention. The way someone hesitates before answering. The way someone laughs too loudly. The way someone avoids eye contact when a particular subject arises. Real people are inconsistent, contradictory, vulnerable, proud, tender, stubborn. Fictional characters must feel the same. But observation alone is not invention. It is raw material. The...