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The Craft
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What Makes A Character Interesting?
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1) Having a working mind with alive brain cells
2) being brave but not stupidly brave
3)Having a specific goal in her life, not just living for the hell of it
4) Not being dump and DE..."
Good comment, very specific, on topic.

Yes, I did. How did you guess?

Joanna wrote: "Yes, I did. How did you guess?"
I just played a hunch. It was just a hunch. I played my luck; sometimes a hunch pays off, sometimes it doesn't, I was just lucky, I just played a hunch, Frank.

I don't mean "how often the tell a lie" rather, if the writer is writing them honestly, good/bad. Do all the motivations hold true to the character?


In other words, characters who save the cat.

Frank: What you're trying to say, J, is you just played a hunch. A lucky guess. Sometimes a hunch pays off, sometimes it doesn't. You just played a hunch. Is that what you're trying to tell me, J?

I was just wonder how to notice when we are doing that, and squash it?

Plus everyone has some sort of fear or phobia,so highlight this problem to make your character more human.
Why not have them talk their own language.eg.I have noticed in some songs that the artist pronounces there as therr.
Have their wardrobe stand out from the crowd.

Names are good, but choose carefully. Naming your villain "Snidely Blackhart" is not a great idea. Naming your hero "Ashurbanipal Dinwiddie," ditto.
Plus everyone has some sort of fear or phobia,so highlight this problem to make your character more human.
This could work well for one character, but it's potentially a cliche--e.g., Indiana Jones and the snakes.
Why not have them talk their own language.
Because readers will tire of the funny spelling. You can give them a frequent dialogue tag, like "...not that I'm complaining," but even that can get tiresome. Again, use caution.
Have their wardrobe stand out from the crowd."
That works the first time, but constant references to Ashurbanipal's nehru jacket will soon get obtrusive. Not that I'm complaining...

Seeing how many readers have problems with the Dutch names in my book, I don't think you should go too exotic, although Lovecraft's readers didn't complain about Shub Niggurath or Nyarlathotep.
Ross wrote: "Plus everyone has some sort of fear or phobia,so highlight this problem to make your character more human."
Not everyone has a fear or phobia, but most people have quirks. Like incessant nail-biting or counting to ten before they deck someone.
Ross wrote: "Why not have them talk their own language.eg.I have noticed in some songs that the artist pronounces there as therr."
While my Rastafarian character has some speech idiosyncrasies, most characters in my books set themselves apart through speech patterns or calling people 'pal', etcetera. Writing phonetically could jar readers from their suspension of disbelief. We can't all be Anthony Burgess.
Ross wrote: "Have their wardrobe stand out from the crowd."
You can have people look Gothic or Preppy, but if you mention that too often, readers will get irritated.


Books mentioned in this topic
The Beautiful and Damned (other topics)Biggles (other topics)
Peccadillo: A Katla Novel (other topics)
Well, yes, that's exactly the crux of the topic, what makes you "get behind them." Or, in the case of Anthony and Gloria, what makes them "not matter." Please try to clarify a little.