Fulfilling Your Dream of Writing – Step 5

This step is where you start getting serious about your story. Why? You found a writing location and you have the basic idea and theme for the story. But this is where you begin to choose and Define your Characters.

After you’ve decided on a theme for the book, consider which type of characters would be best suited for the story. Write a list of their names. Write a page about each one: who they are, what they are, and their importance to the story. Identify their strengths and weaknesses. What do they look like? Any scars? Handicaps? What’s their emotional and mental temperament? What are their likes and dislikes? Write anything else about them that you can think of. Even if some details do not make it into the story, it will help you to know them better.

One well-known writer said, “If I’m not personally familiar with all my characters, they don’t get into the book.”

These are the resource pages you will refer to as you write about them. So allow your characters to come to life on these pages for your benefit. If you do it correctly, your readers will receive the benefit later.

Writing the background for your characters will enable you to keep them straight in your own mind as you write the story.

Here’s why I emphasize this effort. In a movie I saw several years ago, a man appeared with his right leg in a cast. In a scene about 10 minutes later, his left leg was in the cast. Whoops! And in a movie I saw over a decade ago, the lawyer wore 3 different dresses in a 5-minute courtroom segment. Someone forgot to do their job. Whoops again!

Protect yourself and give your book a good foundation. Bring those people to life in your thoughts as you plan, and they will be alive when you write the story.

I’ll see you tomorrow.

Write Creatively

A First-time Author Making Good

P&L enjoys helping people see their literary dreams become reality. But it’s even more fun when the clients become excited and begin telling people all around them about their new book. When a man in northwest Arkansas asked about a book-signing event, we helped him with the arrangements. He then got on the phone, sent texts and emails to hundreds of people, and talked to people everywhere he went in town. Not only has he generated excitement all around, he has placed his third order of books within a few months – and the book-signing event hasn’t even taken place yet.

Three activities are needed to succeed in the literary field. 1) Writing a good book and employing a good editor. 2) Planning a book-signing or other public event. 3) And hiring or becoming a great PR agent. These three concepts, along with choosing an excellent formatter/publisher, can fill the wallet and put a smile on people’s faces.

If you who are reading this blog have a book or a story in mind, contact us. We’ll be happy to help you make your literary dreams come true.

Visit us at: https://plpubandlit.org/