Showing Up…

presence by by shantaya ~ dannie 2787193477_d70168046d_tShould the protagonist not appear, in court when summoned, the judge renders a default in favor of the opposing character, whether they be defendant or plaintiff.

The character has failed to present and/or make her or his case for a story. And so has the author.

All forward motion of plot ceases. No story exists, that is unless the narrative is one of chronicling the central character’s avoidance of what has come to bear.

The absence of story, or rather the character’s ability to show up may seem a bit silly, or a simplistic aspect of fiction writing to address.

Yet, authors beware.

We must also remain aware, and carefully observant to give sufficient thought and consideration to the nature of the conflicts that shape our stories, most specifically, the aspects of situation, problem, and goal that compel our characters to act and therefore drive plot.

And how is it that our protagonist does not show up, or rather fails to appear in court.

We must give a clear and present problem, preferably one that threatens their existence on one or two of many levels: psychic, spiritual, mental, physical.

Our writing must then demonstrate through prose, and most particularly the action and dialogue of each scene, the threat to survival antagonists, and their accompanying obstacles, manifest in varied forms upon the central character.

And here once again, specificity becomes the name of the game.

The details of not only the antagonists, but also the special problems they present the protagonist, define not simply the nature of the central character’s struggle.

They also reveal unique aspects of character and personality and the certain ways in which these traits will evolve and change due to the challenges of the situation and story.

________________________________________________________________________

Please note:

www.anjuellefloyd.com will be on hiatus during December 2009 for site maintenance and upgrade.

We will return Monday, January 4, 2010.

Until then visit me at anjuelle floyd–the writing life

  • Share/Bookmark

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Leave a Reply

CommentLuv Enabled

Table of Content

Archives

Join Mailing List!

Receive My Blog News!

Delivered by FeedBurner

 Subscribe to my feed!

Poll

Do you buy holiday-themed books?

  • I buy them for myself. (100%, 1 Votes)
  • I do not buy them. (0%, 0 Votes)
  • I buy them to give and get. (0%, 0 Votes)
  • I buy them to give. (0%, 0 Votes)

Total Voters: 1

Loading ... Loading ...

Coming Soon!

On Sale Now!

RSS Anjuelle’s Writing Life

  • Last Edits, My Personal Best, and Being Present… February 9, 2010
    The past two weeks have been a blur. I'm in the last stages of editing my novel, The House, that is due out later this year, and times have been quite interesting. It's funny what happens when you reach a point of having to let go of a book and "put it out there" so to speak. For me it's a scary time. And particularly so, since I […]
  • Of Intermediate Regions, Hunger and Thirst… February 8, 2010
    There stands an intermediate region in the life and structure of a novel, that place between crossing the border of the opening and beginning and entering into a series of actions that lead to the penultimate center of the journey. It lies between the edge of that vast new world of survival that constitutes the protagonist’s path of growth and transformation […]
  • Give-and-Take, Mysteries and Playgrounds… February 4, 2010
    Networking is an interesting and weird thing. It requires give-and-take. In a world or culture so focused on taking, and amassing, the 21st century version of connecting with others can cause us to see some things about ourselves that are not so pretty. The Internet is clearly a place where transparency is a plus. You must give to get. And what you give has […]
  • Of Perseverance, Remaining Open, and Characters that Embody Our Change… February 3, 2010
    Perseverance in completing that first draft it the first act of embarking on the journey of evolution we undergo each time we craft a story. Thus we focus our energies and concentration on towards typing each word so that we might complete each sentence, craft every paragraph, shape each scene. At this time, we, the writer must not fall under the spell of ju […]
  • Distractions, Passion and Showing Up… February 2, 2010
    Why is it so difficult to write sometimes? Distraction. It is the secret enemy of writers and authors that slithers in, most often unnoticed, when we have many things going on. Ahhh, the art of multi-tasking. Distraction presents an especially difficult challenge when good and positive things are happening for and to us. Writers, like most artists, come to o […]