![](http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_W7wZl7NYv0k/TNKr7vdHwkI/AAAAAAAAAfo/FILOQqEOPak/s1600/2m8BXUfrir2l49p3MICJBy3Co1_500.gif)
One tendency that should probably be avoided is for the author to make his or her protagonist a mirror of themselves. The story becomes self-insertion fan-fiction. I hate that stuff, so I must try to avoid it at all costs.
Somethings that I'm sure I want from this protagonist:
He must have a major flaw that he will accept and/or overcome through his character arc.
Such a flaw is hard to choose, because I have such a critical view of myself and can only see flaws. Hence I'd rather avoid granting them to my hero.
Then again, this process may be therapeutic: I may come to accept these facets of myself as the hero does.
So what flaws to choose? I despise arrogance and self-righteousness in people, and I want to like my own character, so Corbin will not be a douche in that regard.
Perhaps cowardice? Naiveté? A mix of both, I think. He's had a rather sheltered life prior to being sent off to trenches in WWI. So he can't be too squeaky clean and prissy.
Definitely neurotic. That is something about which I can accurately write volumes. Paranoid in a social way: he reads people wrong or assumes far too much negativity.
Hmm... I must think about this further.
1 comment:
On the radio the other day they were talking about how a genius character that has a social disorder is popular today. i.e. House, Bones, Dexter. Just a thought. Maybe it'll help.
Post a Comment