Articles
If
you have decided to write a novel, the story that exists within it
extends way beyond the book itself. This 'backstory' is what helps give
your book depth: here are a few points to keep in mind about the 'past'
of the book you're writing.
A novel may encompass any period of time, from an hour or two to many centuries. Yet this span of time, no matter how great, is finite; it has a
beginning and an end that coincide with the start and finish of your
book. Yet we all know that time itself is limitless - so what happened
to make your story happen?
This act - the incident that sends
your hero or heroine zooming along their roller-coaster ride through
your book - is not the start of your story, though it is the event that
starts your story. Let me try to explain this, on the face of it,
baffling statement.
The event that starts your story is the one
that turns your lead character's life upside down. This event, decided
upon by you, can be almost anything, depending on the story you wish to
tell - aliens land and invade earth; he or she loses their job; war
breaks out unexpectedly; they are kidnapped and have to escape -
virtually anything at all. Its sole reason for happening is to
jump-start your story into life and set the ball rolling - without it,
there would be no story to tell.
Yet the story doesn't start
at this point. You see, your story is made up of two main elements. The
first is your plot - the second is your characters. In order for these
characters to be believable and to have 'life', they cannot just spring
into existence from nowhere. Now I realise that your characters only have the life you give them but
you, in your book, are only writing about a certain part of their life
- not usually all of it (unless you are writing another Forsyte Saga!).
It therefore follows that your characters must have had a
'life' before we meet them within the pages of your book. All of them
were born somewhere, grew up, went to school, fell in love, got
married, had kids - the normal, everyday things that happen. Or maybe
not. Maybe that even-tempered guy who in your book runs a floristry
business once did time for robbery. Or that little old lady who you
have decided will sell coffee in the mall was a member of the French
Resistance during WW2.
Crazy? Hey, much crazier things have
happened, believe me! The point, however, is that suddenly these two
characters have added depth. They now have a 'backstory' - something
that happened to them in the past that shapes their life now. It's
imperative that all your main characters, certainly, should have a
comprehensive backstory, or there's a chance that your story may lose
it's reason for being. Imagine:
Chris bangs open the batwing
doors in the saloon, stalks inside and comes to rest in front of Bart.
'Your time's up, pal' he snarls, pulls out a big .45 revolver and
shoots Bart dead. Dramatic, yes - but why did he do it? People don't
usually behave this way, even in times when life was counted as cheaper
than it is now. However, consider this:
Chris has known Bart for
years. Maybe Bart stole something belonging to Chris? Land? A gold
mine? A girl? He's given Bart many chances to make amends because once,
years ago, they were good friends. Bart won't give the thing he stole
back and just recently he's added insult to injury by stealing
something else belonging to Chris. Result - Chris shoots him dead.
This
embryonic plotline shows how Chris and Bart's backstory is essential.
Without it, the scene above would have had one man shoot another for no
reason we could think of - baffling for a reader and, in the end,
uninteresting. As the opening scene in your novel it would also be
mystifying but, when the backstory is fed to the reader, the reason
becomes clear.
The backstory to a character - and the way each
character relates to another - is the mortar that cements the bricks of
your novel together. Bring your characters to life by giving them a
past and you will ensure that your readers will see them as real people. Once this happens, your readers start to care about your characters -
and you have the makings of a novel that no-one will be able to put
down until the last page!
Steve Dempster writes articles for the web and works of fiction. If you would like to get the know-how a novelist needs, visit his site at www.howtobeawriter.co.uk/page11.html
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