Angie's Diary | Online Stories & Articles

Angie's Diary | Online Stories & Articles

Character or Plot?

Posted by on Feb 20th, 2013 and filed under Articles, Creativity, Storytelling, Writing. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

 

Which is more important, character or plot?

Some people think character is most important, others think plot is the most important, but you really can’t separate the two. Plot is what happens to a character, what a character does, or both. You cannot have a character without a plot. To show who or what a character is, you need to show the character acting, and that is plot. You also cannot have a plot without a character.

If an unknown planet is coming toward earth, that might be newsworthy, but it’s not a story until you have characters reacting to the coming planet. How is it going to change their lives? What do they do to prepare for the coming cataclysm? What happens to them as a consequence of their actions? That’s what makes a story.

character 300x168 Character or Plot?Here are some responses from others authors about whether character or plot is more important. The comments are taken from interviews posted at Pat Bertram Introduces . . .

From an interview with J. Conrad Guest, author of Backstop and One Hot January
For me, the most essential quality of a good story is characters with whom I can connect. Finding a good story to write is easy; but writing about characters the reader cares about is more difficult. Hannibal Lecter is one of the most demented characters ever conceived, yet he was fascinating, a train wreck away from which we want to look but can’t.

From an interview with Joylene Nowell Butler, Author of “Broken but not Dead”
You need good characters your reader can relate to almost immediately. They talk about plot-driven vs. character-driven stories, but honestly you can't have one without the other. Readers want to live vicariously through your characters, but first they need to trust you, trust that you'll take them on a journey they'll connect to with characters they care about. Even if what you're asking them to believe takes place on a foreign planet with outrageous settings and descriptions, if you do your job correctly, it won't matter how strange the setting or how weird-looking the residing peoples are, human nature can transcend all that weirdness and endear any reader quickly and for the duration of the story. Think "Dune", "Harry Potter", or "Wizard of Oz".

So, in your opinion, which is more important, character or plot? (You can respond as a reader or a writer.)

(If you’d like me to interview you, please check out my author questionnaire  and follow the instructions.)


 


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1 Response for “Character or Plot?”

  1. Jack Eason says:

    Quite simply, you can't have one without the other Pat. Maybe you should be asking 'description or action/dialogue'.

    An awful lot of books these days sacrifice one in favour of the other. Not that its anything new by any means. One of my favourite books of all time is nearly all description - Stonehenge 2000BC - by Bernard Cornwell.

    The story is so riveting that Cornwell's descriptive prose easily carry's it off. I can't imagine any of today's younger readers (18-25) being remotely interested in it.

    :D

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patbertram

Pat Bertram is a native of Colorado and a lifelong resident. When the traditional publishers stopped publishing her favorite type of book — character and story driven novels that can’t easily be slotted into a genre — she decided to write her own. Daughter Am I is Bertram’s third novel to be published by Second Wind Publishing, LLC. Also available are More Deaths Than One and A Spark of Heavenly Fire.

Daughter Am I: When twenty-five-year-old Mary Stuart learns she inherited a farm from her recently murdered grandparents-grandparents her father claimed had died before she was born-she becomes obsessed with finding out who they were and why someone wanted them dead. Along the way she accumulates a crew of feisty octogenarians-former gangsters and friends of her grandfather. She meets and falls in love Tim Olson, whose grandfather shared a deadly secret with her great-grandfather. Now Mary and Tim need to stay one step ahead of the killer who is desperate to dig up that secret.


More Deaths Than One: Bob Stark returns to Denver after 18 years in Southeast Asia to discover that the mother he buried before he left is dead again. He attends her new funeral and sees . . . himself. Is his other self a hoaxer, or is something more sinister going on? And why are two men who appear to be government agents hunting for him? With the help of Kerry Casillas, a baffling young woman Bob meets in a coffee shop, he uncovers the unimaginable truth.


A Spark of Heavenly Fire: In quarantined Colorado, where hundreds of thousands of people are dying from an unstoppable disease called the red death, insomniac Kate Cummings struggles to find the courage to live and to love. Investigative reporter Greg Pullman, is determined to discover who unleashed the deadly organism and why they did it, until the cost — Kate’s life — becomes more than he can pay.

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