Originally posted at www.mindofbryan.com
Here’s something useful from io9. Original link
Secrets Of Great Characters, According To 6 Science Fiction Authors
Amazing stories need great characters. And when you’re writing a story
set in a futuristic or fantastical world, it’s more important than ever
for readers to be able to relate to your characters. It’s also harder
than ever, because your characters’ lives and experiences will be
totally different than your readers’. How do you make people identify
with someone who lives in the future, or on another planet? How can
your main character stand out, against a bizarre and colorful backdrop?
We asked six great science fiction authors for their advice.
Get to know them as individuals, rather than types. If your characters
are cut off from all the present-day cultural references, like “lawyer
who went to Harvard,” then it’s even more important to think of them as
individuals, says Elizabeth Bear, Campbell- and Hugo-winning author of
Carnival and Undertow. “Try very hard to know them as people,” she
urges. “That goes for any setting, past or present or future — or
alternate reality.”
In particular, you should think, “‘This is a person who happens to have
the following traits, and all that they imply,’ rather than ‘this is a
nuclear physicist who grew up in Iowa.’”
Try making your characters scientists. Or at least, have them be
obsessed with stuff that’s relavant to your storyline, advises Kim
Stanley Robinson, Hugo- and Nebula-winning author of the Mars trilogy
and the Science In The Capital series. Having scientists as your
characters lets you “explore the setting and the character at once.”
And it helps if your characters obsess about the mysteries and
explanations in your story. They can also be obsessed with a planet,
spaceship, new procedure or alien.
Base them on people you know. The most realistic characters are often
based closely on your friends or people you’ve met, says Rudy Rucker,
Philip K. ***-winning author of the -Ware novels and Postsingular.
That goes double for your aliens, A.I.s and robots, he adds. It’s
always better to copy your friends than to lift from “received ideas
about how SF characters might behave. Who wants to see yet another a
humorless talking head with a BBC accent? The absolute worst thing in
Matrix III was when Keanu gets to the virtual office of the Big
Computer Mind, and he meets, like, a tweedy professor with a white
beard. Ugh! At the very least it should have been a fat hacker in a
T-shirt, preferably high on pineal extract.” Also: to make your
characters stand out, try having them say quirky, unexpected things.
“Forget your Star Trek memories, and remember your wild and crazy
friends — the ones who say things that Make No Sense,” Rucker advises.
Give them a thought-out world. The more carefully thought out the world
you’re placing your characters into, the more we’ll be able to believe
that they live there, says Tobias Buckell, author of Sly Mongoose. And
that also makes it easier to “contrast them against this imaginary
place.”
Figure out what they love, and what they fear. Try to find what drives
your characters, including what they want and need, Bear urges. And
understand what traumatizes them. “I tell people I like to know what
they’d want on their tombstone: that seems to give me a really good
handle on who they are.”
She adds:
Characters we can relate to have fears and damage, but moreover,
for me they have to be devoted to something — an ideal, a person,
whatever. Even villains become much more sympathetic when we’re
introduced to whatever it is that they love.
Kage Baker, author of the Company novels, agrees: “It isn’t the way a
person relates to his hovercar that makes him memorable; it’s what’s
going on in his heart.” No matter what planet or time you’re living in,
there will be “certain constants in human existence: struggle against
poverty, rebellion against authority, love and desire, loneliness,
curiosity. Any reader can relate to those.” Make sure your character
has loves and hatreds that readers can see themselves in, and the rest
will take care of itself.
Don’t aim for larger-than-life — and overshoot. One pitfall with
science fiction characters is that authors sometimes make their
characters “bigger than life, or archetypal” to let them compete with
the big, brash colorful worlds they live in. A common mistake is
veering past archetypal, all the way into “over the top, or maybe
somewhat cliche.” If you do try for archetypal characters, think of the
classics from all genres, like Sherlock Holmes’ quirky genius or
Captain Ahab’s drive.
Don’t obsess too much about setting and toys. If you spend pages and
pages on dense descriptions of your settings and how exactly your
hovercar works, you’re distracting the reader from your characters,
says Baker.
It’s enough to say “He climbed into his hovercar” and your reader
will get the idea. You don’t need to give a geography lesson: “They
were sitting in the courtyard drinking fire-palm wine” or “She trudged
back from the well, balancing her water jar” or “They looked out across
the desert and saw the yellow mountains of Califia before them” all
give brief, intense impressions of a place, without stopping the
narrative in its tracks or drawing focus from the main character.
Find out who’s hurting. If your story involves a new situation or
technological breakthrough, figure out who suffers as a result — maybe
that should be your main character, says Robinson, quoting from Damon
Knight (who was quoting James Blish in turn.)
Keep your characters grounded. The stranger the setting, the more
ordinary your characters should be, says Terry Bisson, Hugo- and
Nebula-winning author of Bears Discover Fire. “For example, in my most
recent story, the narrator ‘had a job and an apartment, but that was
all.’ The story wasn’t about the setting but about the character.”
Your characters should be “totally convinced they live in the present,
rather than the future. Because, of course, it IS the present to them,”
says David J. Williams, author of The Mirrored Heavens. Make sure your
world, and your characters, both have a believable past, that anchors
their present. “As Gibson said, the future’s already here, it’s just
unevenly distributed. Same is true for the past: it’s always with us,
but sometimes beneath the surface. How one handles that is the key to
character.”