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Why would you kill a character
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His death is so unfair, however, that you can't help but feel sorry for the guy, nor can you help but blame the protagonist for his role in it. It proved to be an effective tool in showing how fallible the story's hero can be.
I decided (reluctantly) to kill my main character, Nancy Laplante, in the fifth book of the series featuring her but, as a reader said in reaction to her death, 'she was truly burning the candle by both ends'. In a way, her death in action was inevitable, as she was not invulnerable or immortal, but it was at least a heroic death. In turn, her death allowed her young sister to emerge as a character and also allowed her adopted daughter, Ingrid, to become the main character of the series, which now counts eleven books and is going very well. If anything, many of my writers like my new main character, Ingrid, even more than Nancy. In turn, Ingrid now has a young daughter of her own, Nancy Dows, who is already putting her mark on the series and is already very popular. I agree that the death of a character, while a hard decision to take, can actually advance a story and allow the plot to evolve in significant ways.


Seems you're doing this whole thing magnificently.






I think there are characters that I've read before that I wished the author killed off, but they may think like me and the death did nothing for the story. I haven't cried at a death in a book I've read, but I cried at a death in a book I wrote. I loved the character I killed off, but her death was necessary. Maybe, one day, I'll release that story.



I had one reader ask... "Why make her go through such horror?"
My reply... From pain comes beauty!!!
Dana

1. They're the antagonist, they have to die
2. It was just their time
3. They had it coming
4. The author wants to unleash their inner George R.R Martin
5. Didn't mean to kill them, it just sorta happened that way
6. Author got tired of writing about them
7. They were taking the spotlight from other characters
8. They weren't fitting in
9. They had become boring to write about
10. Fans demanded the character be killed
11. To make room for a new character
12. Because the character needs to die in order to come back to life or for the audience to find out the character faked their death

In "Farewell to Arms," Hemingway's protagonist falls in love with a nurse who later dies in childbirth. I'm confident Hemingway was saying something with how that affected the story...
... but I couldn't tell you what it was. I thought it was stupid.
So take that, Ernie.

And personally I think Hemingway is really overrated, but that's just me.

If a character in a series is aging in real time -- eventually s/he has to die, but hopefully there are family members or associates who can continue the series and take it in a new direction.

Interesting topic. I'm currently writing my World War Two book, which actually takes place in 1947. An ex-GI searches Europe for a woman who helped his cousin escape Nazi occupied France when he was shot down.
She's a character who appears in two previous novels, one of which she is the narrator, and you guessed it, she dies in the war which our hero will not discover until the last chapter.
The reason for her death is a twist.

Whether reading or writing, I never want to feel like every character is completely safe. A death shouldn't be "just for the sake of it" but it should always be possible.




1. They're the antagonist, they have to die
2. It was just their time
3. They had it coming
4. The author wants to unleash their inner George R.R Martin
5. Didn't mean to k..."
Regarding #5, "Didn't mean to kill them, it just sorta happened that way," I'm often surprised by what my characters do. They tell me what to write and I serve as their transcriber. Their deaths (or great triumphs) happen when the story tells me that's what needs to happen.

As Clarke said in message # 29, death is part of every lives. A book where everything is always fine and in which nobody ever dies would quickly become both unrealistic and boring (not because showing death is fun but because the unrealistic setting would eventually repeal readers from the book). A good writer can add a lot to his book by turning death into something both significant and ultimately positive (ultimate sacrifice, bad character getting his just reward).

For the sequel, as it is entirely fictional--based on the "What if?" the historical record leaves open, so I killed off one of several primary characters to push the MC to deal with his curse.


In my latest sci-fi novel, aliens invade a planet and kill the mother of a small girl. It was presented as a tragedy but it also led to that little girl to be adopted by the soldier who saved her later on. So, death can be used to promote a good deed or a positive ending.

I knew that for the sake of the story the character had to die. A happy ending would've detracted from the powerful story I had written. The character's death set off plot ripples with some other characters and it helped set the stage for the sequel, which I'm currently working on. The character's death in the prior book affects and partially drives the plot and character motivations in the follow up book.

My book Kill Your Characters: Crime Scene Tips for Writers was awarded a first-place tie in the Public Safety Writers Association Writing Competition.
Here is the link: https://www.amazon.com/dp/1947521780



My book Kill Your Characters: Crime Scene Tips for Writers was awarded a first-place tie in the Public Safety Writers Association Writing Competition.
Here is the link: https://www.am..."
Sometimes one needs to respect that the author has to kill off a character. I watch a lot of films, series and read avidly, I could not ever say that when the writer has killed a character, I wouldn't read any of their other work. If the writer is good and the book/story has been engaging then I'd look to read more of their work. They/we don't kill off our main characters lightly nor in every book.

My book Kill Your Characters: Crime Scene Tips for Writers was awarded a first-place tie in the Public Safety Writers Association Writing Competition.
Here is the link: https://www.am..."
Congratulations on this achievement Steve.

Hi Richard, I agree, sometimes the character has to be killed off, it enhances the strength and power behind the story and/or the impact a series of events can have on a character that means they need to be killed of. I've read this trail with great interest.

Actually in one of my books I couldn't kill a hero - Christian Aaron Moody the Third - who had to die. It was just that he'd already done everything. Saved the galaxy from an alien invasion, rescued his dead family, built his super battleship etc etc. So if he'd lived there would have been parades and hooplah and all the rest, and it would have utterly sickened me! But he was also a long suffering soul who I admired - and I couldn't stand the thought of him dying even a hero's death. So in the end I chickened out and left him clinging to life, being rushed back to the hospital with no certainty either way.
Bugger!
Cheers, Greg.
https://mybookwhisperer.org/2021/03/1...