As writer’s we often create
characters and mold them according to the convenience of the story plot — it’s an
exciting, godlike and powerful feeling to produce “someone” who comes to life
through words and who the readers (ideally) care about. By the time we write The
End our task is complete. We send our characters out into the world to
live on their own, to inspire peoples’ imaginations, and to remain who they are
throughout perpetuity.
Unless we decide to revive those
characters in another book.
Why, why, why would we do that? They’ve
done their time, did their job and now they deserve to rest. …but maybe not.
Sometimes our characters stay with us just begging to move on.
Maybe we write a spin-off and our
once favorite NAGGING characters appear in the storyline again. When I wrote His Lucky Charm I literally fell in
love with a secondary character. Tom Hughes suffered tragic heartbreak in his
past and he was just the kind of man to council his cousin and her heartthrob
about the need to grab onto each other while you can, and his cousin and her
heartthrob did get married. I wanted Tom to have his own HEA (Happy Ever After)
ending and I wrote Within the Law.
This was pretty easy. While I did create Tom’s character and an important chunk
of his history, it wasn’t until I wrote Within
the Law that I really concentrated on developing him fully. And while the
lovers of His lucky Charm did make
appearances all I had to do was put a bit of time into their storyline. Easy peasy.
Another spin-off I wrote stemmed from
Final Sin where I created Jake and
Julie, and Julie’s sidekick Matt. In the spin off book, Hyphema, I was able to really develop Matt’s character and
introduce his wife who had only been mentioned in Final Sin. The focus was entirely on Matt and Sudah in the spin-off
book.
Then I wrote Karma Visited about Annie who is able to astral travel in her sleep
to people in need and when she needs help who will be there for her? She meets
Dave and it’s a tense story. As an author I liked it and readers have told me
that they liked it as well. I wanted more of Annie and Dave’s story so I wrote
a sequel. A sequel is literally a continuation of a story line and often
including the same main characters. A sequel is also in the future in respect
to the first book so your characters have to show growth and still remain the
same people we fell in love with. If they had an HEA in the first book though
we also need to introduce new conflicts or the sequel will effectively be just
one long epilogue. I admit it was very difficult, I kept starting and then
scrapping everything I had written. It was frustrating.
I believed I had a terrific story in
my head, one that presented some major conflicts and great action, but how was
I going to tell it? Finally I decided to interview each of my characters, separately,
and I asked some pointed questions. What had transpired since Karma Visited? Where had they hoped to
be by this point in their lives? What were their biggest fears? And there were
many more questions, some much too personal to tell everyone else. I got a
clear picture of who Annie and Dave were in the year after Karma Visited ended. The sequel did get written and I am pleased to
announce that Annie’s Karma will be
available later this month.
Writers have a responsibility to
create real people (aka characters) who have had lives before the first pages
of our books and will live long after the words The End are typed.
2 comments:
The first word is seldom the beginning and the end isn't always the end. I like the linking of your stories.
Malcolm
Thank you Malcolm. It was like giving CPR to my characters for a while, LOL.
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