Where Do My
Characters Come From?
I love people
watching. I also love ear wigging! Put the two together and you can see how
some, but not all of my characters are born. The rest I would say come from my
imagination. Imaginations need feeding of course and that means I read and
watch TV and films - a lot. I also daydream.
I always carry a
note book about with me. (Not just any old note book however they have to be
just right.)
If I’m on a
train, in a bar or a coffee shop, in the queue at the supermarket – anywhere
really, and I hear a particularly good conversation I jot down any interesting
tid bits I overhear. I have a terrible memory so I need to jot it down straight
away otherwise by the time I get home its either gone out of my head or I’ve
lost the gist of it. Sometimes I hear a phrase or a single word which sparks a
thought. Sometimes it is the tone of the whole conversation. Often it is a
funny colloquialism or a slang term pertinent to a particular part of the
country. Always be careful what you say within earshot of an author – it might
end up in a book.
***
I’m a Yorkshire
lass so hopefully any Yorkshire in my books comes across as authentic so that
the character feels real. When I go to Northumberland for research I make notes
about the accent and intonations as the accent is less familiar to me. These accents
then help build the characters.
What my
characters do as well as say is just as important. Watching body language, a
person’s stance or a particular “tic” or gesture someone might have either
consciously or unconsciously can also add realism to a character. An action can
show you how a character feels without me having to tell the reader ‘she is
anxious’.
One aspect of
characterisation I struggle with is names. A name can mean different things to
different people and getting the name right can influence the character in a
big way. Also as an ex teacher I have taught a lot of “names”. I’d never have a
romantic character called Wayne. Don’t ask! Add to this that obviously you
cannot have a “Kylie” or a “Charlene” in a Victorian novel for obvious reasons
and it can become quite restrictive finding just the right name to convey the
type of person I want my reader to meet. Names then are very subjective.
However, in Never the Twain I was lucky in that
there was a limited choice for my two main characters. The identical twin girls
in the story are born either side of midnight as the month turns so they are
not only born on different days but different months. Therefore there were only
two choices; April or May or May and June. I choose the former.
Particular names
are prevalent in different centuries; in Georgian times there was a
proliferation of ‘George’s’ and ‘Charlotte’s’ after the king and queen and in
the Victorian era there were a lot of ‘Victoria’s’ and ‘Albert’s’ for the same
reason. Names also are English, Scottish, Welsh or Irish or even regional or
foreign. As Never the Twain is
partly set in Scotland I wanted the
names of the Scottish characters to reflect this, hence Alistair. But some
names are more class driven such as Effie May and Edward. Sometimes a character
undergoes a name change as I begin to develop the character and realise the
name is not quite working. Again I have a note book and make a note of names I
think of or hear which may come in useful. I recently bought a punnet of
strawberries that were produced by Sean Figgis. Expect that name to crop up in
a future book!
Real people are
seldom black and white and so it is with characters. People and characters are
seldom all good or all bad. In Never the
Twain April and May are identical twins who share some character traits but
have different personalities nonetheless. I wanted my characters to be well
rounded and ‘real’ therefore they are flawed and contradictory on occasions.
It can be fun
getting inside someone else’s head and literally putting words in their mouths.
Seeing how characters think and react to circumstances is easy once you know
your character inside and out. I constantly ask myself how each character would
react in a situation and once that is established it is important that they
stay true to themselves and don’t suddenly behaviour totally out of character. Yet
sometimes we do act out of character under difficult, unfamiliar circumstances.
It is a fine line to draw. However the reader will spot if someone suddenly behaves
completely erratically unless there is a very good reason. April and May’s twin
bond means they have a debt of loyalty to each other but when things get tough
May’s dark side manifests itself to April’s detriment.
My characters
are like my babies; I watch them grow and develop, change and adapt to their
environment. They lead me in all sorts of directions and turn the plot on its
head sometimes. As I am a ‘punster’ not a planner I find this exciting and I
hope you do too when you read Never the
Twain.
Never the Twain: A twin tale of jealousy and
betrayal, love and murder.
The year is 1890. The port of Whitby is
heaving with sailors and where there are sailors there are brothels doing a
roaring trade. Beautiful identical twins April and May are in desperate
straits. They have been abandoned by their actress mother and are about to have
their virginity auctioned off to the highest bidder by a notorious brothel
madam.
Their fate is hanging in the balance
when Captain Edward Driscoll a handsome, wealthy shipping tycoon from Glasgow
saves them before they can be deflowered.
But have they exchanged one form of
slavery for another?
April, reluctantly swept up in her
twin’s secrets and lies unwittingly becomes embroiled in a murderous
conspiracy. Is May’s jealousy stronger than the twin bond which has always
connected them?
Comments
Post a Comment