How much do characters change?

I finally finished my third romance and sent it off to my editor at Kensington.  It took me longer than usual.  My grandson moved in with us for a while, stayed long enough to figure out what he wanted to do next, and then moved out.  The holidays came and went, and so did visitors.  I wrote, but sporadically.  And then I reached the final stretch and pounded out words.  My critique partners, bless them, sped through my draft so that I’d have plenty of time to do rewrites.  And I sent the novel off into the cold, cruel world on Friday, ahead of my Feb. 15 deadline.


This romance has a bigger cast of characters than my last ones.  First off, my editor asked if I’d try for a longer book, closer to 70,000 words than 60,000.  Secondly, I wanted to have more men to juggle for Paula, lucky girl.  And third, I wanted an extra subplot since I was writing longer this time.  I’m not a big fan of love triangles, so I wanted to make sure my novel didn’t have that feel, even with three men in the story.  My editor e-mailed that he probably wouldn’t get to Love on Tap (the current title–but that can always change) until the end of February, so I won’t know if everything worked or not for a while.  But at the moment, I’m pushing it all out of my mind.  I’m ready to move on.


The thing is, I see-sawed back and forth on one of my characters.  I wanted Paula to be attracted to him, but I wanted the reader to know he wasn’t the right guy.  If I made his flaws too obvious, then readers would wonder why Paula was interested in him at all.  As my writer friend put it, “It makes Paula look stupid if she’s attracted to a jerk.”  Okay, I get that.  So I needed Mr. Wrong to be appealing, in some way, to her.  I toned down his flaws to the point that I started to like him.  Not as much as Paula’s real love interest, but enough that I didn’t want the story to end badly for him.


And that brings me to one of my flaws.  I tend to like most people, to see their potential, what’s good in them.  It’s rare that I meet someone and instantly dislike him/her. Another writer friend teases me that it’s hard for me to be mean to my characters.  They might go through rough patches, but I want things to end well for them.  So, I wanted Mr. Wrong to change, to grow, and find a not-as-wonderful, but good-enough happy ending of his own.  And I wrote it that way.  But it didn’t work.  Because when I looked at the story, his character had changed too fast.  He couldn’t cover that much ground in such a short time. Don’t get me wrong.  I think that people can change.  I think it’s hard, but it’s possible.  I think Life buffets us around and makes us change.  But it takes times…and work..and usually some unpleasantness.  Mr. Wrong wasn’t ready yet.  So, unfortunately for him, he ended up in a messy transition instead of a sort-of-happily-ever-after.


I know that characters need to change from the beginning of a book to its end.  But how much?  How much change is realistic?  And what does the character have to endure to force those changes?


Good luck with whatever you’re writing!  And keep your characters your real:)


P.S.  I’ve posted links from Les Edgerton in my blog before, but he gave a speech for the Oklahoma Writers Association that’s pretty useful for writers:  http://lesedgertononwriting.blogspot....


His link on outlining:  http://lesedgertononwriting.blogspot....


And if you’re interested, Kensington is offering a contest for readers to win my first romance, COOKING UP TROUBLE, by Judi Lynn (my pen name for romance): https://www.goodreads.com/giveaway/sh...


 


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Published on January 30, 2016 13:46
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