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Wednesday, October 1, 2025

Writing - part xxxx188 History and the Modern Protagonist

 01 October 2025, Writing - part xxxx188 History and the Modern Protagonist  

Announcement: I still need a new publisher.  However, I’ve taken the step to republish my previously published novels.  I’m starting with Centurion, and we’ll see from there.  Since previously published novels have little chance of publication in the market (unless they are huge best sellers), I might as well get those older novels back out.  I’m going through Amazon Publishing, and I’ll pass the information on to you.

Introduction: I wrote the novel Aksinya: Enchantment and the Daemon. This was my 21st novel and through this blog, I gave you the entire novel in installments that included commentary on the writing. In the commentary, in addition to other general information on writing, I explained, how the novel was constructed, the metaphors and symbols in it, the writing techniques and tricks I used, and the way I built the scenes. You can look back through this blog and read the entire novel beginning with http://www.pilotlion.blogspot.com/2010/10/new-novel-part-3-girl-and-demon.html.

I’m using this novel as an example of how I produce, market, and eventually (we hope) get a novel published. I’ll keep you informed along the way.

Today’s Blog: To see the steps in the publication process, visit my writing websites http://www.sisteroflight.com/.

The four plus two basic rules I employ when writing:

1. Don’t confuse your readers.

2. Entertain your readers.

3. Ground your readers in the writing.

4. Don’t show (or tell) everything.

     4a. Show what can be seen, heard, felt, smelled, and tasted on the stage of the novel.

5. Immerse yourself in the world of your writing.

6. The initial scene is the most important scene.

 

These are the steps I use to write a novel including the five discrete parts of a novel:

                     1.     Design the initial scene

2.     Develop a theme statement (initial setting, protagonist, protagonist’s helper or antagonist, action statement)

a.      Research as required

b.     Develop the initial setting

c.      Develop the characters

d.     Identify the telic flaw (internal and external)

3.     Write the initial scene (identify the output: implied setting, implied characters, implied action movement)

4.     Write the next scene(s) to the climax (rising action)

5.     Write the climax scene

6.     Write the falling action scene(s)

7.     Write the dénouement scene

I finished writing my 31st novel, working title, Cassandra, potential title Cassandra: Enchantment and the Warriors.  The theme statement is: Deirdre and Sorcha are redirected to French finishing school where they discover difficult mysteries, people, and events.

I finished writing my 34th novel (actually my 32nd completed novel), Seoirse, potential title Seoirse: Enchantment and the Assignment.  The theme statement is: Seoirse is assigned to be Rose’s protector and helper at Monmouth while Rose deals with five goddesses and schoolwork; unfortunately, Seoirse has fallen in love with Rose.     

Here is the cover proposal for the third edition of Centurion:

A book cover of a person wearing a helmet and a red cape

AI-generated content may be incorrect.

Cover Proposal

The most important scene in any novel is the initial scene, but eventually, you have to move to the rising action. I am continuing to write on my 30th novel, working title Red Sonja.  I finished my 29th novel, working title Detective.  I finished writing number 31, working title Cassandra: Enchantment and the Warrior.  I just finished my 32nd novel and 33rd novel: Rose: Enchantment and the Flower, and Seoirse: Enchantment and the Assignment.

How to begin a novel.  Number one thought, we need an entertaining idea.  I usually encapsulate such an idea with a theme statement.  Since I’m writing a new novel, we need a new theme statement.  Here is an initial cut.

For novel 30:  Red Sonja, a Soviet spy, infiltrates the X-plane programs at Edwards AFB as a test pilot’s administrative clerk, learns about freedom, and is redeemed.

For Novel 32:  Shiggy Tash finds a lost girl in the isolated Scottish safe house her organization gives her for her latest assignment: Rose Craigie has nothing, is alone, and needs someone or something to rescue and acknowledge her as a human being.

For novel 33, Book girl:  Siobhàn Shaw is Morven McLean’s savior—they are both attending Kilgraston School in Scotland when Morven loses everything, her wealth, position, and friends, and Siobhàn Shaw is the only one left to befriend and help her discover the one thing that might save Morven’s family and existence.

For novel 34:  Seoirse is assigned to be Rose’s protector and helper at Monmouth while Rose deals with five goddesses and schoolwork; unfortunately, Seoirse has fallen in love with Rose.

For novel 35: Eoghan, a Scottish National Park Authority Ranger, while handing a supernatural problem in Loch Lomond and The Trossachs National Park discovers the crypt of Aine and accidentally releases her into the world; Eoghan wants more from the world and Aine desires a new life and perhaps love.

Here is the scene development outline:

1. Scene input (comes from the previous scene output or is an initial scene)

2. Write the scene setting (place, time, stuff, and characters)

3. Imagine the output, creative elements, plot, telic flaw resolution (climax) and develop the tension and release.

4. Write the scene using the output and creative elements to build the tension.

5. Write the release

6. Write the kicker

Today:  Let me tell you a little about writing.  Writing isn’t so much a hobby, a career, or a pastime.  Writing is a habit and an obsession.  We who love to write love to write. 

If you love to write, the problem is gaining the skills to write well.  We want to write well enough to have others enjoy our writing.  This is important.  No one writes just for themselves the idea is absolutely irrational and silly.  I can prove why.

In the first place, the purpose of writing is communication—that’s the only purpose.  Writing is the abstract communication of the mind through symbols.  As time goes by, we as writers gain more and better tools and our readers gain more and better appreciation for those tools and skills—even if they have no idea what they are. 

We are in the modern era.  In this time, the action and dialog style along with the push of technology forced novels into the form of third person, past tense, action and dialog style, implying the future.  This is the modern style of the novel.  I also showed how the end of literature created the reflected worldview.  We have three possible worldviews for a novel: the real, the reflected, and the created.  I choose to work in the reflected worldview.

Why don’t we go back to the basics and just writing a novel?  I can tell you what I do, and show you how I go about putting a novel together.  We can start with developing an idea then move into the details of the writing. 

Ideas.  We need ideas.  Ideas allow us to figure out the protagonist and the telic flaw.  Ideas don’t come fully armed from the mind of Zeus.  We need to cultivate ideas. 

1.     Read novels. 

2.     Fill your mind with good stuff—basically the stuff you want to write about. 

3.     Figure out what will build ideas in your mind and what will kill ideas in your mind.

4.     Study.

5.     Teach. 

6.     Make the catharsis. 

7.     Write.

The development of ideas is based on study and research, but it is also based on creativity.  Creativity is the extrapolation of older ideas to form new ones or to present old ideas in a new form.  It is a reflection of something new created with ties to the history, science, and logic (the intellect).  Creativity requires consuming, thinking, and producing.

If we have filled our mind with all kinds of information and ideas, we are ready to become creative.  Creativity means the extrapolation of older ideas to form new ones or to present old ideas in a new form.  Literally, we are seeing the world in a new way, or actually, we are seeing some part of the world in a new way. 

The beginning of creativity is study and effort.  We can use this to extrapolate to creativity.  In addition, we need to look at recording ideas and working with ideas.

With that said, where should we go?  Should I delve into ideas and creativity again, or should we just move into the novel again?  Should I develop a new protagonist, which, we know, will result in a new novel.  I’ve got an idea, but it went stale.  Let’s look at the outline for a novel again:

1.      The initial scene

2.     The rising action scenes

3.     The climax scene

4.     The falling action scene(s)

5.     The dénouement scene(s)

 

I’d like to get Ancient Light republished and the other novels in this series published.  I’m afraid I’ll have to do it independently, but I don’t think I can trust Amazon to do it. 

 

I finally got a reasonable printed book from Amazon for Centurion.  This was a relief, but I think I have about ten copies running around the house that are all rejects, all printed, and all wrong.  I’m not sure where they get their training and formatting experience from, but it isn’t in the Western world. 

 

I accepted the current printed book although there is still a small issue, but acceptable.  The chapter pages should always be on the right side and never on the left.  Each of my chapters start with a quote from the Psalms.  That puts a Psalms on the right and they started the chapter on the left.  I’ll go with that.  That isn’t the normal way to format, but it reduces page count and is acceptable.  I still don’t think much of the Amazon production or printing group.  Here’s what I think is going on.

I’ll repeat this for those who don’t know.  Many new writers are just so happy to see their novels in print, they have no idea what they should be like.  If you pull down a few professionally published novels from your shelves, you will see what they should be like.  This is how my novels, published by the regular publisher Capstone and Oaktara did it for my novels.  They were perfect, and I could tell.  I’ve read thousands of novels in my life.  I read about a novel a day. 

 

As I wrote, most younger authors aren’t sure what to look for.  Once you point it out, they get it, but many times the excitement of seeing your novel in print gets the better of you, plus if you aren’t certain about something, you are less willing to fight to make it right.  Many of these new authors just accept the poor quality of the Amazon publications for these reasons, and boy, have I seen some doozies. 

 

If you get any of the post Guttenberg novels or books in print from Amazon, you will see exactly what I’m writing about.  I bought one that was atrocious, but it was a free book published in print.  What I mean by free book is that it is outside of the copyright for the author and anyone can just print it or you can download it.  I advise just getting the free books as files.  You can get these books on iBooks from Apple.  I haven’t tried Kindle or another other app just because, why.  The free books used to be in their own section, but now they are mixed in with the pay books.  Many of the free Guttenberg books are republished for a charge.  I have bought some of these books, usually the ones that are not on Guttenberg yet.  They are usually formatted well as a eBook.  They also usually have all the original pictures and prints in them.  This makes them worth the 99 cents they cost.  I usually try to buy collections if I’m paying for these books.

 

What is it about these books—that is, why aren’t they all for free on Guttenberg?  It’s just not yet.  The Guttenberg project has been taking books out of copyright and putting them into files.  The files are usually free, but anyone who pulls the text in for a book out of copyright can sell it as they desire.  Guttenberg isn’t selling, and don’t plan to in the future, however, not every book is equal and not every book is available.

 

One of my favorite means of finding or getting a novel is when I read about them in an earlier book.  I then make a search for the title and the author.  Some books just haven’t made it on Guttenberg yet.  Some, as I wrote, have been lost.  They are likely in someone’s library somewhere, but they just haven’t been rediscovered yet.  Most people aren’t like me.  I just love to read novels especially from the late Victorian 1870s to the 1920s and around that period.  The reason is that this is the real beginning of the Romantic protagonist and plot.  Most novels in this period are written for American and British boys and girls.  They have varying types of protagonists based on the writer and the times.  I should get a little into this by going back to some information about writing and protagonists.  I think we should go there, next.

 

What happened in history to cause the advent and publication of novels.  This is an important question in history.  When Guttenberg invented the printing press, the greatest and most popular publications were the Bible and pamphlets about the Bible.  The greatest and most prolific author of the time was Martin Luther.  Old Marty didn’t make a penny because copyright laws hadn’t been invented to protect his rights. 

 

Really writing and publications remained in the Biblical and scientific for a long time.  The great revolution in printing remained about God and the world until 1826.  In 1826, the availability of cotton paper made it possible to print books at a much lower cost than ever before.  The cost change was almost 10 times.  This was about the same cost change we saw for books with Guttenberg.  To be accurate the cost of a hand written book in current dollars at the time of Guttenberg was about $50,000 per copy.  This is about the same cost of a hand written Torah scroll today.  With the Guttenberg press, the cost of a book went from $50,000 a copy to from $5,000 to $500 a copy.  About a 10 to 100 time cost change. 

 

Before 1826, the people of Europe began to wear cotton underwear.  This was caused by the cotton revolution from India, Asia, and North America.  Wool was right out for intimates and cotton was the in thing.  It’s not itchy and it is much more comfortable especially under clothing.  The cotton revolution began with the wealthy, but the middle class and poor got quickly in on the game.  People could buy used underwear, and they did.  By the 1800s cotton unmentionables were making their way into the hands of paper makers in huge quantities.  The rag pickers became a new industrial level of employee.  Mostly women who understood fabrics and clothing, they sorted the cotton, silk, and wool—and checked pockets.

 

The cotton went into the hoppers for paper making, and the rest to be reused as they could.  These rag pickers were an entire class of poor mostly youthful women who made pennies, but still enough to help support a family.  What went on in 1826 was that the British Bible society found they could print Bibles for lower cost than ever—approximately $25 to $50 a copy.  They got to $25 a copy if they excluded the Apocrypha.  The Apocrypha had been included in every Bible in Christendom from the beginning, but the BBS (British Bible Society) cut it out to save on printing. 

 

This resulted in almost every household in the Western world owning a Bible.  The story gets even more interesting.  All this was due to people wearing cotton underwear.  What a wonderful thing.  How this became a revolution in novels is next.

 

The revolution of the printing press made printing affordable—well to a degree.  We saw that printing costs for books reduced from 10 to 100 times less cost.  A similar event happened with the advent of inexpensive cotton paper, the cost of books reduced by another 10 to 100 percent. 

 

In the beginning of the Gutenberg era, printers made a lot of money by publishing pamphlets that the average person could buy.  The average person could not afford a book, but they could afford a pamphlet.  In the 1800s, the average family could buy a book, a Bible and Fox’s Book of Martyrs were the usual books owned by the average family in the USA at the time.  The poor could buy penny novels.

 

I should mention that literacy was at a high in Europe due to the Church and the desire of the people for education in the time of Gutenberg.  Literacy had become a common part of the poor during the 1800s.  There were no public schools or very few public schools.  Most children were taught at home to read and write usually in a single day—that’s the report of history.  The average person found reading and writing to be common and easy.  They poor as well as the wealthy and middle class strove for an education, and an education didn’t mean just reading and writing or maths.  An education meant multiple languages especially Greek and Latin as well as historical and fictional reading.  The reading, except were libraries began was problematic for the poor.  They had penny novels.

 

I recommend you read some of the very interesting writing from the Victorian Era about the poor and especially the rag pickers.  There were more authors than Dickens writing about the impoverished in this time.  The novels about the poor show the great desire they had for learning and reading.  We know the rag pickers especially (they were young women) were a very strong audience for the penny novels.  Almost all of the published fiction in the period was published by chapter and section as a penny novel.  They weren’t novels, but serial parts of novels.  For example, Dickens, the Bronte Sisters, George Eliot’s writing were all published in serial form as penny novels.  The readers would wait with great anticipation for the next installment.  The rag pickers and other poor would wait for these and other pieces of the serials to be published and they would buy them in droves.  They read them at lunch, in groups, at tea, after work, and all.  The penny novel drove the literacy and the education level of the poor to the point that they and their families pushed their children into the private education that was available to them.

 

Education was something people always wanted to some degree for their children, but even if it was in their budgets, the ability to thrive and succeed was not guaranteed.  I’ll explain some of that, next.

 

A little fact of life people tend to misunderstand or forget is that generally the middle class did not want their main children to pursue education.  This was true in the USA and especially in Europe.  Even though the USA was not by definition a starvation culture by the beginning of the 1800s, Europe still was.  In the USA, especially during the Great Depression, the value of the children’s labor was a much greater asset than their education.  My own parents were encouraged to work on the farm instead of go to school.  They only went to school because the backbreaking work of the farm was worse.  At school they could apply their brains and not necessarily their brawn.  In Europe, still in a near starvation culture due to socialism, the value of the child for labor was still more important than their education.  My parents parents would rather keep their hands on the farm for the value they could produce at only the cost to feed and house.  Children, at the time, had another idea—they wanted nothing to do with the hard labor of their parents.  My father did everything, including going early to fight in World War II to get off the farm.  To him, education was one of the means to freedom—the military was the ultimate means to get out of picking cotton and the other backbreaking work. 

 

In addition, back in the good old days when books were still relatively expensive and not as readily available as today, children longed for them.  They used them for escapism and for entertainment.  Even in my generation, books were the ultimate entertainment.  Everyone longed to read and could read.  Those who couldn’t were indeed doomed to a lack of education and entertainment.  I must say, the boob tube began to steal the entertainment sphere, but it was too trite and stupid for most.  You just can’t be too entertained by Gilligan’s Island—not for long.

 

In any case, in the past children wanted to go to school because that got them out of farm labor.  The parents didn’t want them to go, except the few, the wealthy, and the well educated who knew the future lay in the hands of the well educated.

 

If you caught the main point between the lines, you can see the children desired education to get off the farm now and in the future.  They also wanted the entertainment education afforded them.  I need to explain a little about the educational divide, and why the sudden advent of the Romantic protagonist in writing.  A little hint, it came directly out of the movement of poor children into education—it also had little to do with compulsory education or the reduction of agrarianism in society.  That’s next.

 

In the past, only the wealthy could get a good education.  Most of that education was reading and the study of ancient languages and not what you imagine education to be today.  To understand education I the past, it helps to read older Victorian and earlier literature—then you will see.

Most children were taught to read and write at home.  They also got basic figures (maths) from their mothers and fathers too.  We know from history and literature that most children learned from tutors or their parents and reading was considered the chore of a day.  Literally, children learned to read in a day.  Any child who could not learn to read the Bible in a day, was considered slow.  Writing came later, but schools at the elementary level were just uncommon and considered unnecessary except among the middle class.  The wealthy hired governesses and tutors for their children and we see the governess concept used in Europe and especially Britain well into the middle of the 20th Century.  I’m reading a book right now about 1940s Britain and most of the children had governesses until they were ready for boarding school.

 

In the USA things moved a little differently.  The lack of governesses, most likely due to the dearth of lower middle class women who were sufficiently educated.  Because there weren’t enough to go around the middle class families hired men and women to educate their children in groups.  This saved money and relieved the mothers and fathers who were mainly agrarian and very busy on their own farms.  The middle class in Britain were generally not farmers, they were tradesmen, bankers, and salesmen.  The USA had a unique middle class filled with farmers.  The farmers in Europe until the end of the Monarchy were mainly very poor—just like their feudal ancestors. 

 

In the USA the idea of getting a group of children together for education wasn’t that new of an idea, but it was seen as an effective and efficient means of education.  Public education and the government destruction of education had to wait until the year 1836.  In 1836, Boston opened the first public school.  That was the last year education and literacy levels were high.  They began decreasing the moment the government got involved in education in the USA.  In any case, the American and the boarding school concepts were that children could be taught effectively and efficiently in institutions.  This isn’t necessarily wrong, but individual tutoring and education is always much better than cattle car learning in any classroom.  However, there was a different reason for communal education whether private or public—that was facilities, socialization, and sport.

 

The ancient view of the gymnasium is that the purpose for education is reading, memorization, and martial training.  The city-state always needs men who can fight to defend it.  The idea of sport comes directly out of the military and martial notion of training to be a great warrior.  Great warriors and citizens need literacy and memorization.  In the past these went hand in hand.  In any case, individual tutoring could not achieve the martial vision of training proper warriors.  The public education problem was one of the democratic ideal.  Public education means to produce good citizens and workers.  It all depends on how you define this.  A good citizen, in the sense of a republic is one who is a warrior educated in freedom and able to determine his or her own destiny.  In the democratic ideal, the good citizen and worker is complacent, a cog in the wheel, and doesn’t rock the boat or the state.  I’m a fan of the republic and that view of education, therefore I don’t think a public education can ever produce a truly educated person.  It will always seek to produce a cog and not a free person. 

 

There is more to this education story in history and about novels.  We’ll get to that, next.

 

If you look at the protagonists in the Victorian novels, they are aristocrats and the wealthy.  The reason is twofold.  In the first place, most novels in the Victorian Era were written for the wealthy and the nobility.  This was changing relatively quicky due to the paper and printing revolution, but I’ll get to that.  The second reason was the problem of the starvation culture that was the entire world due to feudalistic monarchies. 

 

The Victorian protagonists were like Oliver Twist and Sara Crew.  They were children of wealth who had somehow lost their wealth, but the major plot and protagonist of the Victorian Era (and before) was blood will out.  Blood will out, as a theme or plot means the aristocratic or wealth-based background of the protagonist will show them as smarter, better, and stronger than the common person. 

 

The idea of blood will out did have a reasoned basis in history.  In starvation cultures, which all the world was until the USA, the poor were typically stupider and less strong due to malnutrition.  The aristocratic and wealthy were much smarter and stronger, not to mention more beautiful, with better hair teeth, and nails, than the chronically malnourished poor.  This changed with the USA first, which was the first nation to break the cycle of starvation and chronic malnutrition for the average person.  If you wondered why the people of the USA are generally larger and typically smarter than most of the rest of the world—that’s it.  By the way, the reason the USA stopped being a starvation culture is that it was the first nation in the world where the average person could own land, most notably farmland.  In Europe, the poor lived on farms and on property owned by nobles and the wealthy—they didn’t own their own land.  Until the great land revolutions beginning around the 1800s in Europe, Europe was a starvation culture.  The poor began to move to the cities and into industry then too which led to better nutrition and less starvation. 

 

So, the Victorian plot was blood will out.  Typically, the protagonist was either doomed to penury, it they were originally poor (that’s Pip from Great Expectations) or fated to wealth (that’s Sara Crew and Oliver Twist) if they were originally wealthy.  This began to change, and as I wrote, the reason it began to change was first the change in the number of middle and poor class readers, and second, the change from a starvation culture to a much greater meritocracy.  That’s next.

 

What happened in history to fundamentally move the market for novels from the wealthy and the aristocratic to the poor and middle class was a revolution in the poor.  Starting in the USA, the starvation culture of the world began to be pushed back by capitalism caused by land ownership.  In Europe, the movement of the poor into industry moved them from starvation to nutrition.  The end result was a once impoverished class that now could stand on even ground with the wealthy and the noble.  This meritocracy was terrible for the wealthy and the noble.  Where once the rich and the aristocratic were smarter and stronger due to their nutrition, the poor were no longer malnourished.  They could compete on a similar level and the wealthy soon learned the poor at a similar intelligence and strength had a much greater motivation to succeed.  Success in education meant an end to back breaking work and the beginnings of absolute success.  In the USA, this was called the American Dream.  In the rest of the world, this became the dream of the poor—success.

 

We see this great change in literature as the Victorian Era petered out.  The protagonists went from Oliver Twist and Sara Crew with their blood will out plots to a zero to hero plot and the common person or child in a classic Romantic protagonist.  The protagonists were suddenly not wealthy and noble—they were the poor scholarship student who excelled due to hard work and skills.  Even in the middle class this type of protagonist held sway because the poor had become the middle class.  They were no longer starving, and they were the market for all these new novels.

 

Remember the rag pickers?  They were the audience for the penny novels.  They read everything they could, and one of the great plots and themes in these novels was success.  It was success for the wealthy and noble, but no matter, the rag pickers thought they had some hope for success—and they did.  With nutrition, their children could compete on the same level as the wealthy and noble.  Those rag pickers still read, and their children read, and their children’s children read.  The wealthy and aristocratic found themselves as the antagonists being displaced by the upstart poor.  The poor took all the scholarships and the awards.  The entire world changed. 

 

Do I need to point out that the number of poor well exceeded the wealthy and noble?  The poor as a market was the market.  The market went from supporting the few who could purchase books to the now many who could purchase books.  This was the modern revolution in novels and novel writing.  It started as printing available to the poor and ended up with the Romantic protagonist.  The Romantic protagonist in the Modern Era comes from the common.  This was a mutual movement of the culture, society, and people.  The result was a host of novels for the regular people that celebrated the ascent of the common and the poor into the middle class and into the upper classes.  This was the American Dream applied to literature, and it made the world and writing a much better place. 

 

I should explain about the Romantic protagonist again.  That’s next.

 

I really should call the Romantic protagonist the Modern protagonist.  The reason is that there is a defined Romantic Era in literature which is defined by the Romantic protagonist, but not necessarily the Romantic plot.  The modern protagonist and plot just happen to align nearly perfectly with the classical Romantic protagonist and plot, the literary world just doesn’t happen to like that fact.  In fact, the modern literary world is enamored of hateful and ugly protagonists—it doesn’t like the classical Romantic protagonist because they are the protagonists we love.  I should likely go back to the basics of good novels to explain this a little.

 

A great novel is the revelation of the protagonist.  Yes, yes, we usually think that a great novel has a great plot and theme and all that jazz, but that’s not necessarily true.  Many great novels have some pretty benign and stinky plots, but they are considered classics and great novels none-the-less.  What makes a novel great, for most readers is that they love the protagonist. 

 

Now, when I write “love the protagonist,” I mean that in a very specific way.  In simplistic terms, we usually think that many readers want to be like the protagonist or live their lives like the protagonist, but we know that isn’t really true either.  Many protagonists go through literal hell to resolve the telic flaws of their novel.  Most readers don’t really want to go through the horror and dangers, or make the decisions of their beloved and favorite protagonists.  They do live vicariously through the protagonist, but that doesn’t necessarily mean they would trade places. 

 

What we love about the protagonist is the things, events, and experiences they overcome to survive and resolve the telic flaw of the novel.  We don’t necessarily love the telic flaw resolution, the plot, and we don’t necessarily fall in love with the theme, but we fall in love with the protagonist.

 

One of my favorite protagonists for this example is Sara Crew.  Sara Crew is the protagonist from A Little Princess.  She is the little rich girl who is also personable, kind, and smart.  She loses everything when her beloved father dies in India, and she is stuck as a servant in the boarding school where he placed her.  Sara Crew is a lovely girl before her loss.  When she goes from hero to zero, she is still a little princess.  When she encounters the horrible conditions of a Victorian servant, she shows pluck and kindness.  She is a perfect person and character.  Even her sadness and anger at her conditions are lovable.  We love her because of who she is and because of what she does.  We love her decisions and actions because we understand her decisions and we generally agree with them.  That’s really the secret of a lovable protagonist.  If the reader understands their actions and motivations—and agrees with them, we pretty much love that character.  This is especially true of characters who are not the absolute norm.  In other words, in our world, we normally know people like us.  Those who are fighting to achieve greatness or just position in the world for example, the less privileged, less educated, less skilled, and all, are easy to love when they do achieve.  Sara Crew is the example of a “blood will out” plot, but we love her, especially when she loses everything and still acts like a princess.  Her steadfast strength in the face of adversary, shows her personality as a protagonist and a character.  She is the kind of person we want to be on a fundamental level, but we really do not want to experience a life like hers.  We don’t want to start as a princess and have to face a life as an impoverished child at the mercy of the adults in a boarding school.  We do love the resolution of her telic flaw, the loss of her father and wealth, but it isn’t the plot that really intrigues us—it is Sara Crew.  The plot and plot resolution is almost a deus ex machina, a god machine (an unreasonable and unlikely resolution).  We don’t love A Little Princess for the plot.  We love A Little Princess for the protagonist, and we would like to see more about her—except the resolved telic flaw of A Little Princess makes that impossible.  The author would have to take her back to zero again—an impossible feat in this context.  We love the protagonist, but we can’t have her any more.  Perhaps the author could have given us another Sara Crew novel in a setting where she is more of an adult, but that wasn’t really the forte of the author.  A Pride and Prejudice style novel of Sara Crew’s social fall and resurgence might be an interesting read, but as I wrote, her author wasn’t really into those novels.  The innocence of the youthful Sara Crew made her the beloved protagonist she was.

 

Now, this is a good segue into a discussion about the Victorian and earlier protagonist as compared to the modern (and what is technically a Romantic) protagonist.  That’s next.              

 

There’s more.

 

I want to write another book based on Rose and Seoirse, and the topic will be the raising of Ceridwen—at least that’s my plan.  Before I get to that, I want to write another novel about dependency as a theme.  We shall see.

 

More tomorrow.

For more information, you can visit my author site http://www.ldalford.com/, and my individual novel websites:

http://www.ancientlight.com/
http://www.aegyptnovel.com/
http://www.centurionnovel.com
http://www.thesecondmission.com/
http://www.theendofhonor.com/
http://www.thefoxshonor.com
http://www.aseasonofhonor.com

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