How to wield back story with panache
How soon can you tell readers your characters' backgrounds? Most writers are in too much of a hurry. Here's how to deploy back story with confidence
We've got a tonne of stuff to let readers know at the start of a novel. What's going on, who wants what, why it matters. And then there's the background to the characters' lives – how they know the people they're with, what they do day to day. All the inventory that isn't action but gives context and depth.
That's back story.
Here are the two main problems with back story.
Most writers fling it in too early.
Most writers dump back story in one big chunk.
Both these problems mean the story grinds to a standstill. Which means the reader stops being engaged.
So how do you judge when is the right time?
First woo your reader
Imagine you have a new acquaintance. I'm talking about real life, by the way. Don't even think of telling them about your life until they're curious about you. Tell them the bare minimum until you've bonded with them in an experience that has drawn you closer together. Even then, give dribs and drabs; don't whammy them with your entire biography. Give only what's immediately relevant, what arises naturally from what you do together and what you already know.
In our hypothetical friendship, can you see how much is being held back? And how the full picture might not come out for a long time?
This is like your book's relationship with the reader.
Your reader meets the book, is pulled into the world of the characters. You have to judge when they are genuinely curious for a dollop of back story. And it's usually much later than you think.
So where do you put it?
I'm just thrashing through a final edit of My Memories of a Future Life, and with a title like that you can bet it's got heaps of back story. Here's what I did.
Cut it all out
I made a copy of the book up to the first turning point and cut out all the back story. It ran very smoothly without its weight of explanation, and offered me natural places to reintroduce a paragraph or two. Once I'd got the characters safely (or perilously) to their point of no return, the reader was warmed up enough to welcome the first chunk of back story.
Here's how I'm dealing with the rest.
Make the back story part of the action
What you imagined as background may not have to stay as background. Could you make it part of the active story? In Life Form 3, which my agent sent out to publishers this week, I caught myself struggling with a lot of explanations. I realised I'd brought the reader in too late. So I started the story earlier and dramatised a lot of the explanations in real time.
Leave it as late as possible
As we said above, there are points in the story where the reader will welcome a few pages about the distant details of the character's childhood, or how they first got a job at the circus. The later you leave it, the more delicious it might be.
Use back story as bonding material
As well as explaining back story directly through the narrator's voice, you can also use it to deepen a bond between two characters in a story. If one character tells another how their relationship with their stepson went wrong, that's miles better than leaving it in back story.
So much of what works in writing mirrors real life. If you think of your book as developing a relationship with the reader, it's much easier to see you can't pitch a chunk of back story in the first few chapters. So woo them a little. Intrigue them. Bond the reader to your characters and to you as a storyteller. There will come a point where your back story is very important to them.
Breaking news – historical and speculative author KM Weiland has obviously been wrestling with this topic recently too. She's just posted a case study on back story in one of Hemingway's classic shorts – check it out here.
Thanks, Binder.donedat for the pic How do you deal with back story? Do you find it a problem? Do share any examples of novels that have handled this well!







