by Barbara Claypole White
I have a favorite line in my debut novel, The Unfinished Garden: life is in the details. For
my birthday, my husband put it on a bumper sticker, so now it goes wherever my rusty,
dented CRV takes me. Why do I love that
line? Because I’m all about character, and that one, short sentence sums up my beloved
hero.
James has obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), which means
he’s detail-obsessed. His world spins on order and control. Everything has to
happen in the right way, at the right moment, and when he speaks, he chooses his
words with care. As he turns to the heroine and says, “Life is in the details,”
I imagine a slow smile spreading from the corner of his mouth, and I hear a
touch of self-deprecating humor. The reader—although not the heroine—also knows
that James is fighting an OCD fear, so the context makes an important statement
about James’s attitude to his anxiety disorder. The second I typed those words,
my writer’s gut tingled, and I knew I had found the real James. “Life is in the
details” is James’s voice.
Finding the right words, and using them in unexpected ways,
is how we reveal character. For example,
last month my family went to see one of our favorite bands—The Airborne Toxic
Event. Through a quirk of fate, we ran into the lead singer before the show.
Afterward, I heard my son on the phone with his best buddy: “I hugged Mikel,
and he smelled of miracles.” Is that not a perfect image? (Confession time—yes, I stole it for the hero
of my second novel, The In-Between Hour.)
If my son were a fictional character, what would those words
tell the reader about him? That he has a dream—which he shares with his best
buddy—to be a rock star. Had he said, “I hugged Mikel, and he smelled of sex
and drugs,” the reader may have made the same assumption…but without gaining any
sense of my son’s voice.
The Beloved Teenage Delinquent is an award-winning poet and
lyricist. When I ask him to read my work, I know he will focus on individual
words in a way that none of my other readers do. He has the eye of a poet. In
poetry—Every. Single. Word. Counts. Part of my learning curve as an author has
been to realize the same is true when creating character’s voice. Finding that
voice is all about the right word at the right moment….
Barbara Claypole White is the author of The Unfinished Garden*, a love story about grief, OCD, and dirt (Harlequin MIRA, August 2012). The In-Between Hour follows in January 2014.
* winner, 2013 Golden Quill Contest for Best First Book
Can I steal your son?! He sounds amazing. Love this post, Barbara.
ReplyDeleteThanks! He's a keeper!
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DeleteWell chosen words for this post, Barbara! Excellent on-point message!
ReplyDeleteThanks. :)
DeleteWhat a wonderful post, Barbara! And I love the kinds of things your son says about the world, the unique and beautiful way his mind works. You must be so proud of him...and he of you!!
ReplyDeleteAh, so nice for all of you to go to a concert together and have serendipity bring him a miracle and you a line!
ReplyDeleteThis is spot on, Barbara! It is so very important to find the right words to show who our characters truly are.
ReplyDeleteI love that your son is such an inspiration!
Oh yes, the poet reading, the poet writing, and the sparse words that just fit. Love this post.
ReplyDeleteEvery time I see a picture of your boy, I smile. He's got that kind of face, you know? Big things coming his way.
Ah, thanks guys. :)
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