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Character-Driven Versus Plot-Driven?
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LOL! I can't see how I'm the only one crying.

Haven't read Kay but I think I know what moment in the Dark Tower series you're talking about (but I may be wrong...I haven't read the last 2-3).

I am the same way-I deal with a lot of real life horror with my job (I work with abused and neglected children plus I do foster care) and so maybe I have seen too much but I didn't feel sadness for him I was waiting for the point! But I guess that's the problem with telling a story chronologically

Wow-I have to agree with Grant here. But if you only read the first Malazan book I guess that makes more sense...in my opinion Malazan is a much stronger entity.
Malazan has the only book that DID make me cry...Memories of Ice



i have yet to read the third novel - but i will soon. very soon!



i actually wrote the sentiments above in another thread altogether, accidentally deleted the post, and then promptly forgot all about it. it just came back to me!

The same thing happened when I first started reading the Malazan series. I was 100 pages in and just couldn't see what the fuss was about. But, so many goodreads people loved it, I kept on reading and by page 150 I was hooked!

Maybe if I'm coming down with the flu and a story catches me off guard I'll get a lump in my throat and my eyes will water, but that's about it.



I think that is the major difference between Plot vs character driven novels. TNoTW is very character driven and the only way to enjoy the book is to invest in Kvothe's character. The plot (whatever it is) is playing 5th fiddle to Kvothe - so when Kvothe is getting run over by life again and again I find myself all choked up.

I read my first Kay novel a couple of days ago, the Lions of Al Rassan, and i liked it, so i am glad i have the Fionavar Tapestry to look forward to, i guess since it's epic fantasy it has more magic?





I study history.

Tigana, too, while obviously derived from Italy, has a fair amount of magic too.
Excellent article, Nicki. Thanks for sharing

This was actually my unit question for Macbeth: "How do the choices we make reflect what happens to us?" Cause, dude. Did he continually make bad choices leading him deeper and deeper to his death.
So you have someone attacking a character. Seems like total plot, right? But with a character driven book, the character can lead to a myriad of results. She loves to fight and hacks through this asshole with speed and relish. She can fight, and ends up killing the asshole, but then pukes all over herself till she dry heaves her guts out all over this guy's bloody, stinking, oozing remains. She runs away. These are just three results off the top of my head. That result--relish, vomit, or fear--will then lead her to the next result. Every choice she makes changes what happens next.
A plot driven novel by necessity admits that it doesn't have characters, but puppets being manipulated by the author for affect--to highlight a theme, or world building skills, or that cool battle scene. Obviously we all manipulate writing some, but without the character's driven input on what they are doing with their lives, you frankly have a huge plot hole in your plot driven novel.
I find my themes tend to arise from my characters--talking like "evolving as a person," "coming of age." Not just Vampire or whatever. I usually don't know what my theme is when I start a book. It isn't till I'm writing the last line and need that summing up statement that I start to get it. But I hate overt theme, usually.



Regarding the original question... I need characters I care about enough, and then I need a plot that puts them through hell so I can't put the book down. And then I'm a happy reader :)
I don't really think a character driven story requires a character to grow, Ms. Cicada. It is the case in many stories, surely, but it isn't a necessity. It could merely be the exploration of a character, where we learn about him and what makes him tick without necessarily seeing any part of that change, at least not in any significant way. I would also argue that authors need to manipulate characters, plot, everything as puppets and tools regardless of their purpose in the overall project. That is just writing. Though you may spend more time detailing a character, every choice is nonetheless carefully crafted to reflect or serve a point.

That's a tough one. There are certainly many books (particularly fantasy books) where..."
I felt the same way about Confederacy of Dunces. One character was more unlikeable than the next. It was only brilliant if brilliant equals highly developed meanspiritedness.

Regarding the original question... I need characters I care about enough, and then I need a plot that puts them through hell so I can't put the book down. And then I'm ..."
I'm glad I'm not the only one! :)

Interesting. . . .I won't deny that, as a writer, we manipulate every detail of our writing, but as a reader, I don't want to be able to feel that manipulation. It should be subtle enough so I feel like I'm going for a ride, not being taken for a ride.
As for characters, I see your point of view about just exploring a character, and maybe I've just been in therapy waaaay too long, but I don't believe people can not change. Everything that happens effects us, and we, in turn, effect it. Even the choice that your are not going to change due to events is, in fact, a choice you have made.

Obviously every element of the 'behind the scenes' bits of writing should be subtle; that's half of the writing process, really. I don't think I really implied that the reader should be able to tell, but I think it's important to keep at the forefront of your mind, as an author.
As for change, I don't think a couple of choices really constitutes great character growth in any way. It merely depends on the story, of course, but as an example of a character who spent several novels with no character growth, I suppose we can bring up Sherlock Holmes. In a couple of more Watson-heavy novels (in particular, where he was getting married), there were a few moments of dilemma with his character, but mostly, it was Holmes from beginning to end. He didn't need to change, and he was better off not changing. It didn't benefit the story. Many long running series, as well, don't have much character growth after a certain point. If you keep changing the character much, they just aren't going to be the characters we care about. The most 'change' they go through is deciding they like spinach or something equally inane.
There are many things that factor into it, though. A character's role in the story. If they are in a position of power - where at least part of the action is their will as opposed to some omnipotent evil, as it often is in this genre - then they aren't going to be affected as heavily by it. Older characters, in general, are more set in their ways, and can more easily adapt to change in the world around them, without changing much about themselves, than younger characters can. And, I mean, some protagonists just aren't there for that purpose. Frankly, I am sick of shoehorned in character arcs that leave me with a character I no longer, or don't let me grow to like them until the end - long after the point where I give a damn. If it doesn't really matter if the character has grown between point A and point B, I think authors should stop trying to make it happen, anyway.
As for change, I don't think a couple of choices really constitutes great character growth in any way. It merely depends on the story, of course, but as an example of a character who spent several novels with no character growth, I suppose we can bring up Sherlock Holmes. In a couple of more Watson-heavy novels (in particular, where he was getting married), there were a few moments of dilemma with his character, but mostly, it was Holmes from beginning to end. He didn't need to change, and he was better off not changing. It didn't benefit the story. Many long running series, as well, don't have much character growth after a certain point. If you keep changing the character much, they just aren't going to be the characters we care about. The most 'change' they go through is deciding they like spinach or something equally inane.
There are many things that factor into it, though. A character's role in the story. If they are in a position of power - where at least part of the action is their will as opposed to some omnipotent evil, as it often is in this genre - then they aren't going to be affected as heavily by it. Older characters, in general, are more set in their ways, and can more easily adapt to change in the world around them, without changing much about themselves, than younger characters can. And, I mean, some protagonists just aren't there for that purpose. Frankly, I am sick of shoehorned in character arcs that leave me with a character I no longer, or don't let me grow to like them until the end - long after the point where I give a damn. If it doesn't really matter if the character has grown between point A and point B, I think authors should stop trying to make it happen, anyway.

? Didn't say you did.

I really hate static characters. To me they mostly serve no purpose. Why am I following this character if they are going to show no growth? Everyone grows and changes based upon their experiences, even older people. I deal with characters like Belgarath & Polgara - but even they have to show some type of change. When looking at Holmes, it’s easy for him to show no change because the majority of the Holmes work is short stories - but how would Holmes fit into a tome as massive as TNotW? The flatness of the character would get to be overwhelming (in a bad way).
I don't think 'static' and 'flat' are synonymous by any means, and any character who is at the center of a plot is worth following, even if they do not grow through it. I personally prefer static characters, and that is what it is, a preference. I just don't care for how it is so often preached that you must have a dynamic character, as opposed to you may.
I don't know, most writing guides are pretty anti-flat characters, but most of the good writing books I've read are neutral to static characters. Far from excited about them, sure, but most of them don't discourage them so heavily. After all, functionally, they can serve the same role as a dynamic one for the reader. It is far less important, overall, that the character changes than it is that our perception of the character changes.

CicadaGrrl wrote: "The fact that the publishing world sucks is no excuse for us to be lazy readers or writers."
What does that have to do with the discussion? I mean, there are a lot of bad books out there, but the presence or lack thereof of dynamic characters has no real impact on it. Most of the books I can think of that I really hate had dynamic characters, though some changed rather... badly, I guess... without much of a character arc, I suppose. They just sort of abruptly change their POV. Still dynamic, though.
I think we could discuss bad character arcs, though, leading to bad stories. If you are going to have one, you have to do it well.
What does that have to do with the discussion? I mean, there are a lot of bad books out there, but the presence or lack thereof of dynamic characters has no real impact on it. Most of the books I can think of that I really hate had dynamic characters, though some changed rather... badly, I guess... without much of a character arc, I suppose. They just sort of abruptly change their POV. Still dynamic, though.
I think we could discuss bad character arcs, though, leading to bad stories. If you are going to have one, you have to do it well.

Books mentioned in this topic
Memories of Ice (other topics)Children of the Night (other topics)
The Dragonbone Chair (other topics)
Idon't feel sorry for him per se, I...feel sad. But I fully admit to my wussidom so...sue me, lol.