Guest Post: Kimberley Griffiths Little on Deepening Character with Setting
By
Kimberley Griffiths Little By the time you've written several manuscripts, most writers begin to realize that you're either a Character Writer or a Plot Writer. Meaning that the jump-start in your brain comes from a particular character that inspires you-or a tidbit of a plot, some sort of quirk or danger in the world.
Me, I’m a setting writer. Beautiful plantations, medieval cities, unique terrain, are a springboard of ideas. Setting inspires me deeply. When I feel that tingly magic of a certain place oozing through my soul, I dive into my research with arms stretched wide and then nearly drown, surfacing only to hit more libraries, buy more books, do university or special collections research, and interview local folks to explore it as fully as I can.
Of course, character and plot intersect constantly. They are the two most talked about novel elements.
But which comes first, plot or character?
It’s the chicken-and-egg phenomenon. Which is more important? Is our main character the most important element in our stories or books; their personality and relationships and motivations? Or is it plot, the problems, the personal journey, and the very cool adventure we’re weaving together?
Character and plot do go hand in hand-but to me they are very much the same because you cannot have one without the other.
“Your novel is the story (plot) of a person (character) and how they grow and change (character) during the course of the events (plot).”
So you may be wondering how setting intersects with character and plot? Does setting really matter? Isn’t it one of those elements that can be added later, or decided at any time, and does it actually play a crucial role?
Well, try getting away with that to any science fiction or fantasy writer! World-building (setting) for a believable science fiction story can take months or years and is an integral element in a can’t-do-without-it -way for the world and plot elements to make sense.
Think of
Harry Potter without Hogwarts,
"Mad Max" without Thunderdome, or
Jane Eyre without Lowood School, or
Katniss without District 12.
Your characters simply cannot be floating “somewhere” in time and space. We’ve all read novels where the story takes place in an undefined or made up city. Any Town, USA. Maybe the state is named, maybe not. The characters and plot of a story set in the Bronx is going to be completely different than Tucson or San Francisco, the plains of Kansas, or the swamps of Louisiana.
Stories I wrote eons ago were like that-set Anyplace, Someplace, I’mNotSureWherePlace-and they weren’t very strong stories. My characters did not come alive, they weren’t three-dimensional people, and my plots just didn’t matter that much because where was everything happening? Some cliff? Some desert? Some shopping mall? A vanilla person living in a vanilla environment having a sort of vanilla adventure. No offense to vanilla lovers out there!
Setting, is the place your characters were born, the place they live, the neighborhood, house, specific city and state.
Checklist of How Setting Influences Your Character and Plot
- The type of person they are, their personality, likes/dislikes, fears, habits.
- The family they have, the neighborhood/town/city/state they live in.
- The problems they might encounter.
- Other people who influence them--for good or ill.
- Their religion and belief system.
- The culture/quirks/mannerisms of the setting.
- The nuances of your character's dialogue, their inner thoughts and problem solving.
- How your character(s) view the world.
All these elements spring from setting.
In a book that takes you to a place you’ve never been before.... When the author brings that place--that location--alive, setting often become its own character. You can practically feel the setting, taste it, touch it, hear it, and smell it. When a book does that, the reader is truly transported to a new world and is able to get inside the main character in a whole new way and on many different levels.
Adventures in Setting
Over the years, I’ve practically become an amateur historian or anthropologist. I love to see new places, to experience what the local people do, find out what they eat and wear, what they think and believe, discover the types of families they have, their environment, work, dialect.
Twelve years ago when I first stepped onto a boat on
Bayou Teche, Louisiana, I knew I was in a completely new and magical world. I’ve returned so often that now I stay with local friends I’ve made. I've visited every small town in Cajun country, eaten the food, talked with everybody I can at stores, gas stations, restaurants, and museums. I've danced at several
fais-do dos, visited schools and graveyards and homes.
I also make sure I'm out in those bayous and swamps every time I visit, too. It is deeply magical and satisfying to me. I breathe the air, feel the sun, take in all the sounds and smells and sights.
It’s gratifying when local people read my books and think I was born and raised there. I want to punch the air and shout, "Yes! I did it!"
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