When y'all are planning out these characters that are going to be in your stories....HOW much background detail do you know about each character?
I've seen advice that you need to know EVERYTHING about your character and for your main characters....that does make a certain amount of sense but surely you don't need to know EVERYTHING about your character when you're writing him/her?
For example, let's say my character hears someone call out and they look over, the person who called says "shoelace!" and makes the hand tying gesture. Surely you don't actually have to have it planned out in your character sketch that the teen style in vogue is untied shoelaces? If for some reason these two people need to interact, can't you as the writer make up a reason? In my example it's that the main guy has untied shoelaces.
Also in the example above, how much detail would the person who lets the character know their shoe laces are untied need to have? A balding 50 something guy called out to the teenager ahead of him in the library, "Hey mate! Your shoelace is untied. [makes hand tying gesture when teen looks over.]" More detail isn't necessary unless the 50 something balding guy shows up later and the teen has to remember where they saw him before, right? I could include the balding 50 something year old guy was wearing blue jeans, steel toed boots, and wore glasses. Oh, and he was black. I could also include more detail about the teen or the library environment but I just am having a lot of trouble understanding how much is necessary to know because I don't think I'll ever mention any of it in the story.
I'm trying out the Ellipsus writing software program and it's got some character sheets that ask for details of each character in the story - if I want - but some of the material it's asking for is so detailed! I'm both happy to have a standard format to flesh out my characters and a little amazed at the amount of detail the software asks me to fill out.
I think some of the stuff about your characters has to develop organically as you write him or her? For example if you're writing someone who was a cop and has been promoted to detective....maybe they have some hearing loss from the sirens they were exposed to while on patrol and that's something that would come up as you write the story....?
Or someone had a traumatic experience as a child or young adult and a certain scent or a phrase or a song lyric triggers a flashback - ok, do I need to KNOW what the traumatic experience was in any deep detail? Can I get away with someone just hearing phrase X and freezing as they remember an angry neighbour screaming at them as a child for cutting across their yard? Or seeing a german shepard and the flight response kicks in as they remember a dog bite when they were a young teen?
Anyways....if there's any advice, it would help!
I've seen advice that you need to know EVERYTHING about your character and for your main characters....that does make a certain amount of sense but surely you don't need to know EVERYTHING about your character when you're writing him/her?
For example, let's say my character hears someone call out and they look over, the person who called says "shoelace!" and makes the hand tying gesture. Surely you don't actually have to have it planned out in your character sketch that the teen style in vogue is untied shoelaces? If for some reason these two people need to interact, can't you as the writer make up a reason? In my example it's that the main guy has untied shoelaces.
Also in the example above, how much detail would the person who lets the character know their shoe laces are untied need to have? A balding 50 something guy called out to the teenager ahead of him in the library, "Hey mate! Your shoelace is untied. [makes hand tying gesture when teen looks over.]" More detail isn't necessary unless the 50 something balding guy shows up later and the teen has to remember where they saw him before, right? I could include the balding 50 something year old guy was wearing blue jeans, steel toed boots, and wore glasses. Oh, and he was black. I could also include more detail about the teen or the library environment but I just am having a lot of trouble understanding how much is necessary to know because I don't think I'll ever mention any of it in the story.
I'm trying out the Ellipsus writing software program and it's got some character sheets that ask for details of each character in the story - if I want - but some of the material it's asking for is so detailed! I'm both happy to have a standard format to flesh out my characters and a little amazed at the amount of detail the software asks me to fill out.
I think some of the stuff about your characters has to develop organically as you write him or her? For example if you're writing someone who was a cop and has been promoted to detective....maybe they have some hearing loss from the sirens they were exposed to while on patrol and that's something that would come up as you write the story....?
Or someone had a traumatic experience as a child or young adult and a certain scent or a phrase or a song lyric triggers a flashback - ok, do I need to KNOW what the traumatic experience was in any deep detail? Can I get away with someone just hearing phrase X and freezing as they remember an angry neighbour screaming at them as a child for cutting across their yard? Or seeing a german shepard and the flight response kicks in as they remember a dog bite when they were a young teen?
Anyways....if there's any advice, it would help!