Monday 11 January 2021

Improving characterisation in short stories

Today's guest is womagwriter and novelist Nicola Martin. 

5 ways to improve characterisation in your short stories

When it comes to creating compelling characters, short stories can be the most difficult medium. How do you make sure your protagonist zings off the page in as little as 1,000 words?

Looking back on my womag-writing career, I think improving characterisation was the number one change that clinched my success. When I first started, I received a lot of rejections. However, when I began focusing on characters as the heart of my stories, that’s when the acceptances started appearing in my inbox. It also helped me secure a publication deal for my psychological thriller, Dead Ringer.

Here are five tips on characterisation that have worked for me:

1. Establish key character facts early

At the start of a story, it’s a good idea to anchor your reader as quickly as possible. Who is the narrator/POV character? Are they a man or a woman? Age? Appearance? Job?

Of course, beginning a story with “Anna was a 35-year-old nurse with long blonde hair” is rather uninspiring. So you need to give clues, rather than spell it out for the reader.

Picking the right name can be a useful shorthand. Hollie is likely to be younger than Mabel. Mohammed is likely to look different to Rhys.

Otherwise, it’s a case of dropping breadcrumbs. A nurse might be pulling on her uniform as she heads out the door. A keen artist might have paint-flecked hair. A 50-year-old might be driving the flash car he bought to celebrate his big birthday.

2. Subvert the expected

In women’s magazines, the same themes and situations tend to crop up again and again. This is part of what’s lovely about the womag world, but editors do tend to look for fresh takes on familiar situations.

Using unexpected characterisation can keep things fresh. Instead of a new mum suffering the baby blues, why not a new dad? Instead of a cosy mystery starring a prim-and-proper white lady from suburbia, why not a Black woman who won’t take things lying down?

Don’t just stick with the first character idea that pops into your head. That first idea might be exactly what the reader is expecting. Instead, work on subverting those expectations.

3. Use contradictions

It’s easy to fall into cliché with characterisation. The cerebral surgeon plays chess in his spare time, or the rosy-cheeked primary school teacher bakes cakes in the evenings. My recipe for more interesting characters? Throw in a contradiction or two!

Maybe your serious vicar character also loves Zumba, or your gloomy teenage boy learns to knit.

Contradictory characters are unusually more interesting, and they make for interesting stories, too.

4. Get inside the character’s head

Because a character only appears on three pages, it’s easy to assume you only need to know three pages worth of information about them. In my opinion, characters are like icebergs. You may only see 10% of their characterisation in the story, but as the writer, you still need to discover the other 90%.

I do this through first-person free-writing. I spend an hour writing as if I am the main character. I write about ‘my’ childhood; ‘my’ job; ‘my’ relationships; ‘my’ hopes and dreams and fears and worries.

There’s no pressure for this stream-of-consciousness stuff to be any good. In fact, I won’t use most of it. But it allows me to get to know the character. Bits and pieces from this free-writing will always crop up in the finished story, creating a more fleshed-out and believable character.

5. Think about their emotional journey

Short stories can often suffer from the ‘so what?’ problem. You might have wrapped up the plot, but have you given the reader a reason to remember the story?

Taking the protagonist on an emotional journey (as well as a narrative one) can be the secret to making a story memorable. How are they changed by the events of the story? What are they going to do differently from now on?

You’ll find the answers to these questions by poking at the character’s emotional wounds. A recent divorcee might need to learn to trust again. An old-fashioned gent who’s always carried his family on his back might need to learn to accept help.


Weaving an emotional arc into your story, based on specific character details, can help to create something that resonates with the reader.

Think about your favourite books, movies or TV shows. You might not remember every detail of what happened, but you remember how heartbroken or joyful you felt when something big happened to your favourite character. When people tell me they’ve read my novel, Dead Ringer, they always talk about the characters and never about the plot or prose.

This is the reason it’s so important to take the time to create characters that connect with audiences. Characters are what people remember. And characters sell stories.

About the author: Nicola Martin is a writer from Bristol. Her short stories have appeared in The People’s Friend and placed in national competitions. Her debut psychological thriller, Dead Ringer, is about meeting your doppelganger (with disastrous consequences). The Daily Mail called it “tense and compelling”.

She blogs about books and writing at nicolamartin.com. You can find her on Twitter and Instagram.


15 comments:

Alex J. Cavanaugh said...

Subvert the expected - I like that.
There is such a narrow window in a short story. The character needs to come alive in the first paragraph.

ados123 said...

Brilliant advice - all of it spot on for womag writing.
thank you.
Alyson

Marguerite said...

Thank you, Nicola. I love the free-writing in first person idea :)

Penny A said...

Thank you, Nicola. Some great advice! Linked with this, perhaps, is the exercise of taking a character and writing just one sentence about them doing something entirely outside the story. (Ballooning? Potholing? Ironing?) You may not use it, but it's amazing the light it can shed!

Eirin Thompson said...

A really interesting post. Thanks, Nicola, and best wishes for Dead Ringer.

Bendywriter said...

Thank you , Nicola (and Patsy).
All good stuff.

Nicola Martin said...


@Alex J. Cavanaugh
Yes, the character has to be there right from the beginning. Such a tricky thing to achieve...

@ados123
Thanks, Alyson!

@Marguerite
It really works for me. :)

@Penny A
Oooh, I hadn't heard of that exercise, but I really like it. The main thing for me is making it so the character doesn't feel like a character, but a real person who has all sorts of experiences beyond the story.

@Eirin Thompson
Thanks, Eirin!

@Bendywriter
Thank you!

Natalie Aguirre said...

I don't read short stories, but your tips apply to novels too. Thanks so much for giving me ideas on how to make my characters more interesting.

Sandra Cox said...

This was a very helpful post. Thanks, Patsy.

Hilary Melton-Butcher said...

Hi Patsy - Nicola seems to have a great way of presenting her thoughts, which have worked ... while she's obviously open to other ideas ... eg Penny's.

Excellent to read ... thanks for introducing us to Nicola - all the best to you both - Hilary

New girl on the block said...

That was really interesting - lots of great ideas. Thank you.

Nicola Martin said...

@Natalie Aguirre
Thanks, Natalie. I'm glad you found it useful.

@Sandra Cox
Thanks, Sandra.

@Hilary Melton-Butcher
Thanks, Hilary.

@New girl on the block
Thank you so much.

Fundy Blue said...

Thanks for some solid information, Nicola and Patsy. Show not tell, for sure!

Patsy said...

Thanks, Nicola.

And thanks to everyone who left a comment.

Penny A said...

PS Credit where it's due! Exercise mentioned was found long ago in A J Palmer's 'Writing and Imagery.' Lots of other useful ideas, too.