Has an agent or publisher or editor (or your writing instructor) told you to 'go deeper into character'? What did you think they meant?
There are two ways to 'go deeper'. One is global: looking at what your character wants/needs most desperately, and what stops them going after it effectively. The other is minuscule: in what tiny ways do they most effectively convey and then amplify to the reader what you, the author, know are their thoughts & feelings about the story or scene they're in?
Writers learn about their characters by (mostly) writing what the character thinks.
Readers will tolerate reading what the character thinks if that's all they've got, but they get deeper into understanding characters, and thus into your story, by reading as well:
- What the character says
- What the character does
- What other characters say about/to them
- What other characters do about/toward them
Thus it's fine for a writer to write 'what this character thinks' in order to learn it for themselves. But then it's on the writer to turn those thoughts into actions and words that reveal the character's layers and complexity to the reader through these other steps.
The activity of discovering the character (rather than having it handed to them in a long inner monologue) is a key reason why many readers get hooked on stories long before the central plot grabs them.
Think of your current manuscript. Have you got mostly 'thinking' or is it mixed up with words and actions?
"But I've got actions!" you may cry, and point to your characters walking, drinking, eating, or flying a kite between lines of dialogue or paragraphs of inner monologue.
megaphone from Freepik |
Here's a secret for you:
Actions can amplify the emotional subtext of even the simplest line of dialogue, dragging the reader along with the character, or they can leech all the emotions out of it and leave the reader emotionally flat too. An emotional flat reader is apt to put the story down and pick up something that makes them FEEL.
You want every action, however minuscule in itself, to AMPLIFY
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So how do you amplify those emotions that the reader is seeing in dialogue and monologue?
When you're ready to start up again, reverse about 30 seconds and watch the small actions they do leading up to that moment when you paused. Which ones match or amplify their tone of voice and their words, and which ones seem to be saying something else or negating what the words are saying?
- a) boring, and therefore unworthy of getting to know better, or
- b) a liar, and distrust them even if the author intended them to be trustworthy.
It might still be a challenge to translate that into your written characters--to deliberately write a single amplifying micro-action in place of a generic action or a repetitive phrase of dialogue--but it's a powerful way to help readers engage with your story...to experience it through both actions and words, and ultimately through their visceral understanding of the characters' emotions. Working to make this a writing habit might be helpful for you, too, in getting around the parts of your writer brain that like to focus on inner monologue alone to show your characters to your readers.