Just as some writers excel at creating believable and intriguing characters and others at creating exciting and meaningful action, some characters are better at opening up and showing emotion in stories while others excel at taking action.
With the belief that we write best when we understand our writing strengths and weaknesses, I include how to determine whether you’re an action-driven writer or a character-driven writer or a thematically-driven writer or a combination of all of the above in The Plot Whisperer: Secrets of Story Structure Any Writer Can Master.
In my work with writers, I find fascinating that often character-driven writers who love to delve into the characters’ internal landscape often write about characters who before moving on when faced with failure / challenges / obstacles in the middle:
- Slow down
- Reflect how they are doing
- Evaluate their behavior and reactions
- Look at what went wrong from all angles
- Learn from their mistakes
While action-driven writers often develop characters who are more impulsive and when faced with failure / challenges / obstacles in the middle:
- Don’t tend to stop to evaluate what went wrong
- Think less
- Act faster
- Multi-task
- Focus on the achieving the goal
In other words, often writers who excel at goal-setting for their characters and love action seem to create characters who move and act quickly and often impulsively to reach the reward at the end.
Writers who excel at creating characters who feel seem to create characters who think and ponder and evaluate on their way to reaching the reward at the end.
Which sort of writer are you? Are your characters just like you?
Uncertain what to write next in a story with a plot? For plot prompts to move your writing to each major turning point and reach the end: The Plot Whisperer Book of Writing Prompts: Easy Exercises to Get You Writing
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