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Grill Your Characters: 7 Questions to Make Your Plot Sizzle

Fri, 2015-06-05 09:03 -- Jocelyn Green
I love summer! For three or four months out of the year, our family grills and eats outside whenever possible, until cold weather puts an end to it all. But when it comes to writing fiction, grilling is always in season, and it’s guaranteed to add a depth of flavor to your characters and a sizzle to your plot. Let me explain. You may have heard it’s a good idea to interview your characters before you write your story. I say grill ‘em. Turn up the heat and make them sweat. In addition to getting their basic bio information and physical description down, you’ll want to dig deeper by grilling your main characters with these questions. You may be surprised by the flavorful blends their responses will give you! 1. The question: What do you want more than anything? What’s your goal right now? The purpose: Her goal will be what she’s striving for throughout the book. This is what you need to place in jeopardy the entire time through a variety of obstacles. How to use it: It should be clear in the first chapter what the character’s goal is. (Yes, goals can change during the course of the story, too.) When you grill another character and learn what his goal is, you can put these two goals at odds with each other. For example, in my novel Wedded to War, Charlotte Waverly’s goal of being a nurse for the Union army conflicts with Phineas Hastings’ goal to keep her in New York City and marry her. Charlotte is also at odds with her mother Caroline’s goal to keep her safe. 2. The question: What would happen if you didn’t reach the goal? The purpose: This helps you figure out if her goal is big enough to carry a novel. If it wouldn’t be a big deal  for her goal to be unmet, she needs a bigger goal. The stakes must be high—life or death, even. This could be a literal life or death situation, or a professional, emotional, or spiritual death. How to use it: You’re going to have to disappoint your characters by blocking their goals at least a few times in the course of the novel. Will she back down or try harder? Will his heart bleed or turn to stone? Watch how Phineas reacts to the obstacle to his goal in this scene: Phineas should never have let her go. He crumpled Charlotte’s latest letter and jammed it into his pocket, nearly popping the stitches with the force. He should never have let her out of this city, out of his sight. The evening’s chorus of chirping crickets seemed to be laughing at him incessantly. His breath came faster, his legs propelled him farther down Twenty-first Street in a blind fury. He kept his head down so no one would see his eyes under the brim of his black bowler.   He had written to Charlotte begging her to come home now that disaster had befallen so near to her. He had been kind. Romantic, even. At least he had thought so. But firm. And she had written back—but not for days—and said no.   She said no to him.   She had defied him, like his mother had always defied his father. The thought made him sick. Then we get into what’s really bothering Phineas—the fear that he’ll either lose Charlotte before he can marry her, or end up a hen-pecked cowardly husband like his father had been. How far will Phineas go to keep that from happening? 3. The question: What are you really good at? What do people like about you? The purpose: Find her strengths. Readers will not find your character like-able unless there are things to like or love about her. How to use it: Use her strengths to set her up as a sympathetic character. But later in the book, make her fail at the very thing she thought she was really good at. This will bring her to a dark moment, or a crossroads, where she has to decide what to do. A choice that may have previously seemed out of character for her would now be believable. 4. The question: What do you hate about yourself? The purpose: Learn her flaws. It could be a body part she isn’t satisfied with or a single or habitual sin. A follow-up question would be: What’s your biggest secret? How to use it: If she hates something about her appearance, it will color how she carries herself, or the clothes she wears. If it’s something deeper, it may cause her shame, guilt, or an inability to form close relationships with others.  Whatever she hates about herself must come out in the open at some point. Then what will happen? When we meet Irish immigrant Ruby O’Flannery, in Wedded to War, we see immediately what she hates about herself: her posture deformed by needlework. Later in the book, she hates something else—her new biggest secret—and this drives the rest of her storyline. Here we see her weighing her options: Ruby couldn’t sleep.   The same mattress that had once cradled her body in softness now felt like a bed of nails, the sheets like weights pressing the air out of her lungs.   Like a body. Hot and heavy.   Ruby threw off the covers and jumped out of bed, gasping for air. Her racing pulse sounded loudly in her ears as she knelt down on the cool hardwood floor for the seventh night in a row, unshed tears swelling thickly in her throat. Would she ever be able to sleep in a bed again without being haunted by an unforgiving memory?   . . . Now, when each night’s blackness rendered her blind on a bed again, her mind reeled her back to the very moments she wanted most to forget. What had she done to deserve that?   If Matthew found out, he would kill her.   If Mrs. Hatch found out, she would fire her.   If the American Moral Reform Society found out, they would turn their backs on her.   God already knew, and could never forgive her. He had turned His back on her already.   She was on her own now more than ever before. 5. The question: What is the most dramatic event that has happened in your life, and how has it shaped you and your beliefs? The purpose: First, it gives you more backstory to help you understand her. Second, you’ll get to see if her faith and beliefs are shaken by circumstances, or if trials make her stronger. How to use it: This will help you understand her motivations as she navigates life throughout the book. If you want her to change how she responds to hardship, you will want to introduce another character or event that will change her mind. The most dramatic event for the Waverly family was the death of Charlotte’s father in a cholera epidemic. The memory of his kindness to the patients in the hospital prompts her to apply to be a nurse. The memory of his death from exposure to disease fuels Caroline’s desire to keep Charlotte away from hospitals. One is motivated by mercy and service, the other by self-preservation. 6. The question: What is your biggest fear? The purpose: This will tell you how to rock her world. How to use it: Your characters must face their biggest fears in the book. How far will they go to stay away from what terrifies them? It depends on the intensity of their fear. 7. The question: What is your most treasured possession and why? The purpose: This will tell you what’s important to her, both materially and nostalgically, since most objects are made more valuable by the memories attached to them. How to use it: If the object is small enough, use it in a mannerism, or see what happens if this object is lost or stolen. Better yet, what would cause your character to willing part with it? In Wedded to War, Phineas has a gold pocket watch from his father which he holds whenever he feels insecure. Readers can tell he’s feeling threatened when he grips onto his watch. Obviously, if you’re going to really grill your characters, you’ll need to ask all the pointed follow-up questions you can think of, and then some. But these will certainly get you started. Grill your characters with questions like these and your plot will go from flat and bland to spicy and robust. Conflicted and well-drawn characters make a story sizzle.

5 Tips for Writing a Series

Thu, 2015-05-14 04:59 -- Jocelyn Green
Many stories work best as stand-alone novels, but if you think a series is for you, there are different ways to do it. Here are just a few: Sequential timeline, same characters. Take the same main characters in different episodes (novels) of a chronological story. Sequential or overlapping timeline, different characters with some unifying theme. That theme could be occupation, such as The Midwives series by Laurie Alice Eakes, or the stories of siblings, or of close friends. In Carrie Turansky’s Edwardian Brides series, the heroines are all tied to Highland Hall: a governess, a daughter, and a refugee. Overlapping timeline, overlapping characters. In my Heroines Behind the Lines Civil War series, the timelines overlap somewhat but each novel is set in a different part of the country. While each novel has its own main characters, I brought secondary characters from previous books of the series back into the story where it made sense. No matter which structure you choose for your series, here are five tips to consider. Read the previous books in your series every time you begin to plot/write your next one. This way your characters and their issues will be fresh in your mind, as you pick up the story again. Write each book so that it makes sense if the reader has not read—or doesn’t remember—the previous books. Gently remind readers of a character’s history, a little at a time to avoid a big backstory dump. For example, by the time my readers pick up Yankee in Atlanta, book 3 of my series, I’m not sure they’ll remember that Ruby O’Flannery is the Irish immigrant they met in Wedded to War, the first book. So in the first scene where she appears in Yankee, I needed to jog their memories, or fill in the blanks for readers who never read Wedded to War at all. Listen to the same soundtrack to help you establish the same tone and mood. I have a playlist of eight Civil War movie soundtracks I listen to as I write. Sometimes I get sick of it and turn it off, but it at least helps get me in the right frame of mind. Change how the reader feels about a recurring character. Think about which of your characters might be “shape-shifters,” to borrow a term from Joseph Campbell’s Hero’s Journey pattern. Take a character your readers hate and create sympathy for her. Or turn a blasé secondary character from a previous book into a hero after all. Allow a saint to fall from grace, or turn a sinner into a spiritual sage. The Hatfields & McCoys miniseries with Kevin Costner and Bill Paxton is one of the best examples of this that I’ve ever seen (or read). Keep it interesting. Make sure each book deserves to be its own book. I’m sure we’ve all read a          series of three books that really could have been told in just two. Keep the conflict, action, and character development moving the plot forward in every scene.

Wedded to War

Heroines Behind the Lines Civil War series, Book 1

398 pages, softcover *Double finalist for The Christy Award (First Novel and Historical Fiction) *2013 Gold Medal Winner, Military Writers Society of America (Historical Fiction) *2013 Inspirational Readers Choice Award (Women’s Fiction), Third Place Charlotte Waverly leaves a life of privilege, wealth--and confining expectations--to be one of the first female nurses for the Union Army. She quickly discovers that she's fighting more than just the Rebellion by working in the hospitals. Corruption, harassment, and opposition from Northern doctors threaten to push her out of her new role. At the same time, her sweetheart disapproves of her shocking strength and independence, forcing her to make an impossible decision: Will she choose love and marriage, or duty to a cause that seems to be losing?

River North (Moody Publishers), 2012

Widow of Gettysburg

Heroines Behind the Lines Civil War series, Book 2

396 pages, softcover * 4.5 Stars from RT Book Reviews! *2014 Silver Medal Winner, Military Writers Society of America (Historical Fiction) When a horrific battle rips through Gettysburg, the farm of Union widow Liberty Holloway is disfigured into a Confederate field hospital, bringing her face to face with unspeakable suffering--and a Rebel scout who awakens her long dormant heart. While Liberty's future crumbles as her home is destroyed, the past comes rushing back to Bella, a former slave and Liberty's hired help, when she finds herself surrounded by Southern soldiers, one of whom knows the secret that would place Liberty in danger if revealed. In the wake of shattered homes and bodies, Liberty and Bella struggle to pick up the pieces the battle has left behind. Will Liberty be defined by the tragedy in her life, or will she find a way to triumph over it? 

River North (Moody Publishers), 2013

Yankee in Atlanta

Heroines Behind the Lines Civil War series, Book 3

412 pages, softcover* 4.5 Stars from RT Book Reviews!  *2015 Silver Medal Winner, Military Writers Society of America (Historical Fiction) She hid from her past to find a future—and landed on enemy soil. When soldier Caitlin McKae wakes up in Atlanta, the Georgian doctor who treats her believes Caitlin’s only secret is that she had been fighting for the South disguised as a man. In order to avoid arrest or worse, Caitlin hides her true identity and makes a new life for herself in Atlanta as a governess for the daughter of Noah Becker—on the brink of his enlistment with the Rebel army. Though starvation rules, and Sherman rages, she will not run again. In a land shattered by strife and suffering, a Union veteran and a Rebel soldier test the limits of loyalty and discover the courage to survive.

River North (Moody Publishers), 2014

Spy of Richmond cover

Spy of Richmond

Heroines Behind the Lines Civil War series, Book 4

432 pages, softcover*  Is living a lie ever the right thing to do? The Confederate capital in the height of the Civil War: no place for a Union loyalist. But just the place for a spy. Her father a slaveholder, her suitor a Confederate officer, and herself an abolitionist, Sophie Kent must walk a tightrope of deception in her efforts to end slavery. As suspicion in Richmond rises, Sophie’s espionage becomes more and more dangerous. If her courage will carry her through, what will be lost along the way—her true love, her father, her life?

River North (Moody Publishers), 2015

The Mark of the King

400 pages, softcover* 2017 Christy Award Winner* After being imprisoned and branded for the death of her client, midwife Julianne Chevalier trades her life sentence for exile to the fledgling 1720s French colony of Louisiana, where she hopes to be reunited with her brother, serving there as a soldier. To make the journey, though, women must be married, and Julianne is forced to wed a fellow convict. In New Orleans, tragedy strikes, and Julianne must find her way in this dangerous, rugged land, despite never being able to escape the king's mark on her shoulder that brands her a criminal beyond redemption.

Bethany House Publishers, 2017

The Message in a Bottle Romance Collection

448 pages, softcover. Join the journey as one word etched in Latin on an ancient bronze bottle travels through the centuries to reach five young women who are struggling to maintain their faith in God and love. An Irish princess, a Scottish story weaver, a Post-Colonial nurse, a cotton mill worker, and a maid who nearly drowned each receive a message from the bottle just when they need their hope restored. But will the bottle also bring them each to a man whose love will endure? Novella collection co-authored by Joanne Bischof, Amanday Dykes, Heather Day Gilbert, Jocelyn Green, and Maureen Lang

Barbour, 2017

A Refuge Assured

416 pages, softcover* RT Book Reviews 4.5 stars, Top Pick* Booklist Starred Review* Lacemaker Vivienne Rivard never imagined her craft could threaten her life. Yet in revolutionary France, it is a death sentence when the nobility, and those associated with them, are forced to the guillotine. Vivienne flees to Philadelphia, but danger lurks in the French Quarter, as revolutionary sympathizers begin to suspect a young boy left in her care might be the Dauphin. Can the French settlement Asylum offer permanent refuge?

Bethany House Publishers, 2018

Between Two Shores

Between Two Shores

*2020 Golden Scroll Award, 2nd Place for Historical Fiction, Advanced Writers & Speakers Association
The daughter of a Mohawk mother and French father in 1759 Montreal, Catherine Duval would rather remain neutral in a world tearing itself apart. Content to trade with both the French and the British, Catherine is pulled into the Seven Years' War against her wishes when her British ex-fiancé, Samuel Crane, is taken prisoner by her father. Samuel claims he has information that could help end the war, and he asks Catherine to help him escape. Peace appeals to Catherine, even if helping the man who broke her heart does not. But New France is starving, and she and her loved ones may not survive another winter of conflict-induced famine. When the dangers of war arrive on her doorstep, Catherine and Samuel flee by river toward the epicenter of the battle between England and France. She and Samuel may impact history, but she fears the ultimate cost will be higher than she can bear.

Bethany House Publishers, 2019

Veiled in Smoke

The Windy City Saga, Book 1

*2020 Golden Scroll Award, Historical Novel of the Year, Advanced Writers & Speakers Association
*2020 Kipp Book Award Winner (historical), Fiction Readers Summit

Meg and Sylvie Townsend manage the family bookshop and care for their father, Stephen, a veteran still suffering in mind and spirit from his time as a POW during the Civil War. But when the Great Fire sweeps through Chicago's business district, they lose much more than just their store.

Bethany House Publishers, 2020

Shadows of the White City book cover

Shadows of the White City

The Windy City Saga, Book 2

*2021 Golden Scroll Award (2nd Place, Historical Novel of the Year), Advanced Writers & Speakers Association

The one thing Sylvie Townsend wants most is what she feared she was destined never to have--a family of her own. But taking in Polish immigrant Rose Dabrowski to raise and love quells those fears--until seventeen-year-old Rose goes missing at the World's Fair, and Sylvie's world unravels.

Bethany House Publishers, 2021

Drawn by the Current

The Windy City Saga, Book 3

*2022 Christy Award Winner (Historical)
*2022 Golden Scroll Award (2nd Place, Historical Novel of the Year), Advanced Writers & Speakers Association

A birthday excursion turns deadly when the SS Eastland capsizes with insurance agent Olive Pierce and her best friend on board. After her escape, Olive discovers her friend is among the missing victims. When she begins investigating the accident, more setbacks arise. Finding the truth will take all she's got to beat those who want to sabotage her progress.

Bethany House Publishers, 2022

The Metropolitan Affair

On Central Park, Book 1

*2023 Booklist Top 10 Romance Novel

With a notorious forger preying on New York's high society, Metropolitan Museum of Art curator Lauren Westlake is just the expert needed to track down the criminal. As she and Detective Joe Caravello search for the truth, the closer they get to discovering the forger's identity, the more entangled they become in a web of deception and crime.

Bethany House Publishers, 2023

A River Between Us

Cora Mae Stewart’s world collapses when Sherman destroys the Georgia cotton mill where she works and has her arrested for treason and sent North. Faced with impossible choices, she does what she must to keep a little girl safe in an unhospitable land.

The Hudson Collection

An ornithologist at Manhattan's American Museum of Natural History, Elsa Reisner is tasked with cataloging a country Gothic estate. Once there, she bonds with the house's other occupants, including an architectural salvage dealer who still bears scars from the Great War, and is swept up in a treasure hunt for a priceless heirloom.

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