05 November 2024, Writing - part xxx859 Scene Outline, About Romantic Protagonist Characteristics, more Relationship Pathos
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:
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)
Why not look at the most important building block
for a novel—the scene. When I first
started writing I had no idea about scenes.
The concept only struck me after writing about fifteen or so
novels. This is one of the very
important concepts that most writing and English teachers and professors don’t
know and can’t teach. As I’ve written
before, if you want an educated and trained teacher about novels, ask how many
they have had traditionally published—that’s the measure of success and, to a
degree, of knowledge. The knowledge
comes with the experience of writing and proven success.
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
I’m not sure if you can get simpler than this
outline to write a good scene. This
outline directs the writer in the proper way to design and write a scene. Let’s look at it again and in detail.
I already covered the ideas of scene input and
output as well as tied this to the tension and release in the scene. To repeat, every scene must be highly
entertaining. If you write a boring
scene, you will have a boring novel.
That’s a guarantee. Let’s not
have any boring scenes. In addition, if
you write from scene input to scene output, you can’t lose your way, and you
can’t get writer’s block. There is more
to this, but let’s go back to the beginning.
Let’s presume we have a scene input. This can be the initial scene or the output
from the previous scene. Step two is to
set the scene.
This context is specifically, showing the mind of
the Romantic protagonist. This is one of
the main and key features of the Romantic protagonist, and one that we love
about them. Their actions and reactions
by expression of their minds is what makes us love them. That’s not the only characteristic of the
Romantic protagonist, but it’s perhaps the most important one. I’ll give you the whole list, next.
Here's my official list of the characteristics of
the Romantic protagonist.
1. Some power or ability outside the norm of
society that the character develops to resolve the telic flaw.
2. Set of beliefs (morals and ideals) that are
different than normal culture or society’s.
3. Courageous
4. Power (skills and abilities) and leadership
that are outside of the normal society.
5. Introspective
6. Travel plot
7. Melancholy
8. Overwhelming desire to change and grow—to
develop four and one.
9. Pathos developed because the character does
not fit the cultural mold. From the
common.
10. Regret when they can’t follow their own moral
compass.
11. Self-criticism when they can’t follow their
own moral compass.
12. Pathos bearing because he or she is estranged
from family or normal society by death, exclusion for some reason, or
self-isolation due to three above.
13. From the common and potentially the rural.
14. Love interest
I can’t remember where I got this list, but I
think I did source it when I originally blogged it. The main point is you can trust this list—it
is a usable list for the development of any Romantic protagonist, and it’s a
pretty inclusive list. I should willow
it down a little because although it’s a conclusive list, it is not an
exclusive list. In other words, if a
Romantic protagonist doesn’t have every listed characteristic, that doesn’t
make them not a Romantic protagonist.
You can have a perfect Romantic protagonist who doesn’t have an active
love interest. The Romantic protagonist
should in some way desire and potentially seek a love interest, but it’s not a
full on requirement.
They don’t have to be from the common—that’s
almost a heresy in a Romantic protagonist, but an author can cut down the
Romantic protagonist to bring them to the common, and that counts. Being from the common is a main
characteristic of the classical Romantic protagonist, but if you drive your
character from wealth or from nobility to the common, or make their nobility or
wealth the common, you can have a Romantic protagonist who is technically not
from the common.
These are just examples. What I should do is go through the list and
explain them as well as give examples.
This will help you understand the Romantic protagonist better and help
show why it is an ideal for most novels and most novelists. I’ll also try to give it some historical
context, but that’s, next.
Do you remember the protagonist’s you loved or
still love? I do. When I was younger and my entire free time,
or most of it, was spent in reading novels, I had novels I would read and
reread. Many I read once a year. Some I just have to read every now and then
because I love them, and I get great ideas for my writing from them. If I look back at the novels and the
protagonist’s I love, they are all Romantic protagonists. A few are not, and those few are very close
to being Romantic protagonists. For example,
Sara Crew is a great protagonist but not really a full on Romantic
protagonist. I think this may be the
best book written in the Victorian Era.
Heidi may be the best novel ever written exclusively for children, and
Heidi is a Romantic protagonist. It came
from the Victorian Era but was a Swiss novel.
Ivanhoe is perhaps the foremost and greatest Romantic protagonist
written in the Romantic Era by Sir Walter Scott.
After and near the end of the Victorian Era, we
get the modern Era with a whole host of Romantic protagonists from the
Victorian writer, Robet Louis Stevenson to Edgar Rice Burroughs. Stevenson and Burroughs are just two of the
trailblazers writing with Romantic protagonist and beginning the Romantic
Plot.
In the Twentieth Century, you just can’t get away
from the Romantic protagonist or plot.
All or most all the novels you love and the protagonists you love are
Romantic. I’ll mention just one of the
most popular in modern history and that is Harry Potty. I’m not a total fan of Harry’s because he
isn’t a full-on Romantic protagonist. He
is close to a Romantic protagonist. I
think Rowlings should have made Hermione the protagonist of her novels—she is a
real Romantic protagonist, but Harry is a messiah in a messiah plot, and the
type of modern protagonist many of us love to hate. I’ll get to that too.
The main point is that all readers want to love
and fall in love with a great protagonist.
I don’t mean romance type love. I
mean the type of love you would give to a besty or a respected comrade. The kind of love that brings you back to read
and reread a novel. So, what makes a
protagonist this kind of loveable, and how do we do it? That’s next.
The best way to look at the Romantic protagonist
might be to just look at the characteristics and examples of them. Let’s just start with the list and see what
makes the Romantic protagonist so special.
1. Some power or ability outside the norm of
society that the character develops to resolve the telic flaw.
This is perhaps the most important characteristic
of the Romantic protagonist. Look at Oliver
Twist or David Copperfield. These are
two classic Victorian Protagonists.
Oliver is a fated/blood will out protagonist, and David is a fated/blood
will out protagonist. Neither has any
special ability or skill other than their birth. Oliver was born from wealth and aristocracy
while David was born of poverty and immorality.
You know from their birth that David will fail and Oliver will succeed
not based on anything either does.
That’s the story of Oliver and David in a paragraph. Now, let’s look at a Romantic or a
semi-Romantic protagonist.
Sara Crew is a Victorian protagonist. She is born to wealth and fated through blood
to succeed. She does have some special
skills mainly the ability to lead and attract others with her storytelling and
her imagination. Because she is a
Victorian protagonist, we know that she will succeed even without her skills,
but we still love her for it. She is a
transitioning protagonist to the Romantic.
Let’s look at a Romantic Era Romantic
protagonist, Ivanhoe. Ivanhoe is born of
wealth and aristocracy, but he is not assured to succeed just as Richard the
Lionheart is not assured to succeed.
Ivanhoe is not fated. He will
succeed because he is the gentlest, most proficient, and most honorable knight
in Christendom. His success is assured
not because of his birth but because of his honor. As I noted, his special skills are all
related to being a knight, and he is a great knight.
Moving to the Modern Era, let’s look at a modern
Romantic protagonist. I’ll put up Tarzan
as the first. Tarzan has the skills of
the primitive man as well as the intellect of the modern man. We are writing about the book and not the
movies. In the movies, he’s always a man
who is half a savage. In the book, he is
a modern man skilled in the arts and whiles of the primitive. He succeeds because of this. There is a lot packed in this, but he is not
assured to succeed because of his birth but because of his skills and
tenacity. A little further along, my
favorite Romantic protagonist example is Menoly from Dragonsong. Her special skill is music and especially
writing music and lyrics. She succeeds,
not because of birth, but because of her skills.
I’ll finish these examples with Harry Potty. Harry Potty is a semi-Romantic protagonist
just like Sare Crew. He is assured to
succeed because of birth. He is the
messiah and chosen one—the boy who lived, when everyone else died. His life and abilities are not so much due to
his skills as much as his birth. This is
a full on Victorian type protagonist. I
call him a semi-Romantic protagonist because certain characteristic do overlap
the Romantic, but not enough. He has
magical powers, but not those he develops with tenacity and hard work. Hermione is the witch/wizard who works and
reads day and night to hone her skills.
Harry would rather be out playing Quiditch or just messing around. There is no skill involved with Harry. He is fated and has all the skills he
needs. Because of this, we don’t love
him nearly as much as we love many other actual Romantic protagonists—like Paul
Atreides.
Paul Atreides is a true Romantic
protagonist. You can’t help but love him
as a character. He is skilled in the
ways of the Atreides and also skilled in the ways of the Freemen. Although he seems to come supernaturally by
these skills, the novel shows you, they come from his ingenuity and study. He is an aristocrat, but his success is not
assured because of his birth. He is a
messiah, but a messiah who builds his own success. These key differences are huge in the play of
these novels, Dune and Harry Potty.
I’ll get more into this characteristic, next.
The skill is the defining characteristic of the
Romantic protagonist. In the earliest
novels with a Romantic protagonist, this skill was knowledge, intelligence,
leadership, or management. The main point
of this skills was that the Romantic protagonist discovered it and developed it
through hard work and study until it became the peak capability within the
world of the novel. It might not be the
top in the world, it could be, but it was always sufficient to overcome the
telic flaw.
So, as an example, the early Romantic
protagonists might discover in school they were skilled at building
knowledge. They worked harder and for
longer hours than everyone else in the school to develop this newly discovered
skill. They took all the awards but only
after hard work and hard knocks.
Usually, the acquiring of the skill was part of the storyline and the
final proof of acquisition only a point in the novel itself. This skill development and skill discovery
are key components in the plot and storylines of most Romantic novels. In some cases, the skill realization is a
main plot point. For example, Ivanhoe
discovered and developed his skills as a knight in the Crusades, but few know
him when he returns to England. The
revelation of the Romantic protagonist’s existing skills is a major and
exciting part of the novel. His skills
and abilities are already developed, but the entertainment for the reader is to
see them revealed. This is another
method of Romantic character development and revelation.
In other novels, Tarzan, for example, we see the
Romantic protagonist not so much discover, but rather develop his skills in the
tutelage of the Great Apes. His real
discovery of skills becomes when he finds his parent’s house and begins to
teach himself how to read the books there.
This is very akin to the modern idea of the Romantic protagonist because
the discovery of this intuitive intellectual skill is truly unique and truly
miraculous. The idea of the miraculous
or unique skill is peculiar to the Romantic protagonist. You can see the beginnings of this in the
first Harry Potty novel. He discovers the
skill of magic. This is they type of
wonderful skill discovery that really excites readers, and has been a mainstay
of Romantic novels from the beginning.
For example, The Sword in the Stone by T.H. White, where Arthur pulls
the sword from the stone.
Other examples of this type of skill discovery
are Andre Norton’s many novel trope of the discovery of psionic skills or
magical skills. She was a leading science
fiction author with these types of Romantic protagonists and event. I want to emphasize, the discovery,
development, or realization of the skill or skills is the main point and main
revelation of the Romantic protagonist.
This makes for an entertaining and exciting novel in almost every
case. I’ll write more about this, next.
The Romantic protagonist either comes with the
skills intact or discovers them and develops them. I think the discovery and development route is
perhaps the most entertaining and most exciting for our readers. In fact, in most Romantic protagonist type
novels, even when the skills already exist in the protagonist, the development
and sometimes discovery of them becomes a very important part of the plot—for
example, Dune or Dragonsinger.
In both of these novels, the Romantic protagonist has honed their skills
prior to the beginning of the novel, but they begin using their skills as well
as discovering new ones, and that drives the novels. Funny that these are science fiction and
fantasy novels—take your pick.
Science fiction and fantasy are modern genres
that tend to drive the Romantic protagonist and the Romantic plot. The reason for this is the genre itself as
well as the readers. I’ll pull another
Romantic protagonist example from the well that is Flavia deLuca. She is the ten year old heroine of some adult
mystery fiction. Flavia is skilled in
Chemistry. We get snippets of how she
gained her skill, but it’s through some telling and dialog. Mostly telling since the novels are written
in the first person. We see, in this
way, how she discovered and developed her skill in Chemistry. The main point I want to make is that using
the skill can be a great page turner, but I want to reemphasize that discovery
of the skill and development is perhaps the most entertaining means of revealing
the Romantic protagonist. Let’s use
Andre Norton as an example.
Many of Andre Norton’s novel are about Romantic
protagonists who discover their skills in magic or psionics and then work hard
to develop them. In many cases, the
protagonist discovers their skill and doesn’t really develop it well. The power of this type of plot is the
indeterminate and unexpected use of the skill.
I prefer the protagonist able to grasp and fully develop the skill, but
that is a specific type of plot and concept.
I recommend this. I think I need
to give a good example of this type of Romantic protagonist and skill discovery
and development. I’ll do this, next.
You have four general ways to go with a Romantic
protagonist: skill discovery, skill development, skill use, or any combination
of these. I think the most effective is
the skill discovery and development, so I’ll spend a little time on it. We mostly saw examples of skill usage,
however, the skill discovery and development followed by use is one of the most
effective means of writing this type of novel.
Now, to be clear, skills or a skill is just a
characteristic of the Romantic protagonist.
It’s like any characteristic of any protagonist, but what makes it
important to the novel and to the protagonist is that the existence of this
skill makes the telic flaw resolution possible.
To explain how the discovery, development, and
use end up with a great novel, I’ll use two examples: Harry Potty and my
character Essie.
Harry Potty is not a full on Romantic
protagonist, but the author uses many of the ideas we find in Romantic writing
to build her character. We see him
discover his magic in stages. This is
good, but then suddenly anti-climactic as instead of more and direct personal
discovery, he gets an invitation to Hogwarts, the magic school.
On the other hand, my Romantic character Essie is
a mystery from the beginning. She is
being taught by Mrs. Lyons and the priest and his wife in the local
church. Essie is drawn to music, but has
problems trying to read it and produce it on a keyboard or the organ, until
Sorcha appears. Sorcha encourages Essie
to just play, and boy Essie can just play.
Essie can play anything and especially what she calls the music of the
Fae. When Essie goes to her lessons the
next day, Mrs. Lyons encourages her to just play the piece her teacher want her
to play but in the same way her teacher played it in church and without looking
at the music. The result is that Essie
can play anything she has heard—perfectly.
This is her skill. In the novel,
she develops and then uses this skill indirectly to result in the telic flaw
resolution. Through music as a skill, we
learn about Essie and her world. I can’t
provide the full impact of the discovery of her skills and then the development
without actually quoting the novel, but I think you get the idea.
If I were writing a Harry Potty type novel, I’d
provide some event that forced him to recognize his skill well before he was
invited to wizard school. I’d have him
working into the late night hours learning to use magic. I’d have him reading and studying to discover
this amazing skill. The novel could be
built up and drawn out much better and with a full on Romantic
protagonist. I think it would make it a
much better novel. In the main, a Harry
Potty who really loves and works hard a magic is better than one who is a
messiah aristocrat who mystically can ride a broom better than everyone else,
but then barely uses his broom skills to resolve any but one small part of the
first novel’s telic flaw. You can write
better than that, but great writing isn’t the only factor in bestsellers. Let’s move on to belief, next.
2. Set of beliefs (morals and ideals) that are
different than normal culture or society’s.
This was never that confusing, but I suspect in
the nihilism era it’s very difficult to understand. In the past, the Romantic protagonist, when
they expressed a belief, it was usually purely rational as opposed to supernatural
or spiritual. That was just the reaction
to the Victorian Era and the idea that superstition was a driving force against
human needs and desires. There is a lot
wrapped into this, so I should get to it.
In the Victorian Era, the traditional view of
Christian religion prevailed while the growth and birth of science and
technology build a new and powerful bridgehead into human thought. The concept of religion and technology or
science could live equally in the minds and hearts of the Victorians, but that
was the balance. We see it today in the
steampunk view of the Victorians—a mixture of the old and the new. The idea of beliefs was going through a
similar process. The continued rise of
empiricism as opposed to faith gave a false impression that the Romantic
protagonist rejected faith. This isn’t
true at all, but as the idea of the Romantic protagonist built in the popular
mind and any thought of religion was squeezed out of literature and especially
novels, the Romantic protagonist moved into the modern ear as a skeptic. His or her belief system was based on the
empirical and the rational and not on faith or tradition.
This focus of the Romantic protagonist was great
because it caused a real revolution toward science and away from
not-science. Is it any surprise that the
Romantic protagonist came into their own in science fiction and fantasy?
You should be able to see that faith in
empiricism and science is akin to belief, because everything is not empiricism
and science. If you need me to explain
this, I will. Math, emotions, thoughts,
magic, psionics, imagination are all non-empiricist and not provable with
science or the scientific method. In
addition, the spiritual and supernatural all fall into this category. It would be pretty funny to have a Romantic
protagonist with magic or psionic skills who didn’t believe in the supernatural
or spiritual—that’s because magic and the idea of psionics has both feet in
these camps.
I’ll have to mention C.S. Lewis again because he
is the premier writer on the subject of the supernatural and the modern
world. The moment a writer brings up
magic or psionics or any other subject that deals with ideas not provable
through empiricism, in other words, not science based, they must deal with the
concept of miracles versus science. In
other words, even if they don’t touch the ideas directly, they have moved into
the world of the supernatural and God.
In the past, this wasn’t really a problem. The Romantic protagonist had a set of beliefs
of the traditional mixed with the scientific.
This was what everyone thought however, the main point of the Romantic
protagonist is that their belief structure was science and rationalism even
while using magic, other skills, or psionics.
The idea you got from them and their authors was some type of rejection
of the status quo and an embrace of the modern.
This is true. The Romantic
protagonist was and is a rational thinker who doesn’t reject the traditional as
much as they grasp the modern and progressive.
However, in this era this has changed to some degree and given us as
writers greater latitude with the beliefs and ideas of the Romantic
protagonist. I’ll look at this, next.
Look at the description of this section on
belief: set of beliefs (morals and ideals) that are different than normal
culture or society’s. In the Victorian
Era and Modern Era as we moved to the Romatntic protagonist as the protagonist
of choice, the answer to this question was always the beliefs of the Romantic
protagonist were in opposition to the moralizing the Christianity of the
Victorians. The Romantic protagonist was
a secularist if the question even came up.
Today, secularism is the belief of the culture and society—the Romantic
protagonist must either not refer to their belief structure or they must have a
set of beliefs that are not secular.
Now, about not bringing up the beliefs of the
protagonist. The problem with pesky
beliefs is that they come out in everything we do—that is through showing. The morals and ethics of the protagonist will
come out no matter what you try to do, and because part of the importance of
the Romantic protagonist is that the author shows their mind or thoughts, it is
impossible not to touch on these subjects.
Still, you can skirt them the way early writers did. They provided their Romantic protagonists
with an ethical and moral background based in secular thought. That can work. I’m of the opinion that writers should
reflect the real world in their writing.
In the Victorian Era when everyone went to church on Sunday and everyone
was pretty much or a like mind on religion, ethics, and morals, the Romantic
protagonist with a secular basis made some sense. They were opposing blind belief without
introspection.
Today, I’m of the opinion that our Romatntic
protagonists should have a strong core belief based in their religion or at
least traditional religion. The reasons
are many, but I’ll outline them here for you.
In the first place, to be “different” than the normal cultural and
social means the Romantic protagonist should oppose the current secular
worldview. Way too many protagonist and
novels are filled to the brim with the secular worldview—I suggest something a
little different. In addition, since
Emanual Kant, the not God can’t exist, so even though the modern world has no
clue both science in the Big Bang and philosophy in Emanual Kant have proven
there must be a God—your Romantic protagonist might as well be an actual
pragmatist and go for it. In addition,
since most modern Romantic protagonists are into magic or psionics, you need
some type of miracle or magical system to be driven by the belief structure of
your protagonist. I recommend basing
your Romantic protagonist’s belief in some traditional structure. I use orthodox Christianity because my
settings are usually Britian, Greece, and France. If figure I might as well use the reflected
worldview to the full extent in designing my Romantic protagonists. A little doubt is okay and I’m not
recommending a religious basis for the novel—I just think a strong religious
basis makes for a great reflected worldview.
It’s amazing what dwells in the history of humankind.
I’ll move on from belief, but I noticed the order
of the characteristics is a little off.
I should be writing about introspection, and I’ll swap that with
courageous for the moment. The reason is
that introspection is more important as a characteristic. I may have to move some others around. For now, we’ll move to introspection, next.
3. Introspective
The introspective nature of the Romantic
protagonist gives us insight into the
mind of the protagonist while explaining the why of the protagonist’s
actions. If you want a great example of
this, just look at Hamlet by Shakespeare. Hamlet is an excellent example of the introspective
protagonist, but not necessarily a Romantic protagonist. What makes Hamlet a perfect example
for us is that the author shows everything and tells nothing.
Remember, show and don’t tell. In a play, you can only show—unless the
narrator tells us something about the play or the protagonist, there is no
telling. This should be a perfect
example to you as a writer about how to show the mind of the protagonist
through dialog and without any telling.
If Shakespeare can do it, you can do it.
We want to show the mind and thoughts of the
Romantic protagonist because this endears the protagonist to the reader. Literally, when the reader understands the
actions of the protagonist and understands their mind and thoughts, they usually
fall in love with the protagonist—in a literary sense. When we understand others, and especially
when we feel their thoughts are rational and reasonable, we usually accept them
and their actions. On the other hand,
when we find a persons thoughts irrational and unreasonable, we hate them
more. I point to the definitely evil
minds of many antiheroes as well as the depraved minds of criminals. This is one of the reasons I don’t like or
use antiheroes. I’m completely in favor
of misunderstood or improperly persecuted protagonists, but not irrational,
evil, or unreasonable ones. In fact,
part of the power of the Romantic protagonist is that they are misunderstood,
but through showing their minds, we approve their thoughts and actions.
What better plot is there than the illicitly prosecuted
protagonist when they are guilty of nothing or when they are guilty of doing
right and are being accused of wrong.
This is the cusp of the Romantic protagonist. Now, the ways we use as authors to show the
mind of the protagonist are critical skills in our writing. I mentioned the main way which is
dialog—that’s what Shakespeare used. There
are other methods that enable dialog and especially the deep type of dialog we
want for our Romantic protagonist.
Perhaps I should look at the basics of dialog, next.
The basics of dialog:
1. Greetings
2. Introductions
3. Small
talk
4. Big
talk
5. Farewells
All human dialog follows this basic outline. In some cases, introductions can be omitted,
but this is only when the participants know each other and have been introduced
to the readers. This is very
important. By the way, if you
conversations don’t follow this outline, you aren’t communicating with humans,
just say’n.
The main point in writing dialog is to get to the
big talk—that is the important talk. The
important talk is the deep and instructive as well as complex conversations
that usually reveal the mind of the protagonist as well as potentially other
characters.
As I noted, the main point of the Romantic
protagonist is to get to the point where we show the mind of the
protagonist. Let’s hope that isn’t small
talk. The mind of the protagonist should
be complex and entertaining. Or let’s say,
we hope the mind of the protagonist is complex and entertaining. We just need to get the protagonist to the
big talk. There might be other
characters who need to get to the big talk too, but especially for the
protagonist, we can’t tell, we much show.
The way we show the mind of the protagonist is exactly the same as
Shakespeare did—through dialog.
Now, if you follow the dialog outline, you can
get your characters to the big talk, but just what is the big talk?
The big talk is where the character expresses their
mind, thoughts, and heart. We shouldn’t
say their unguarded mind, heart, and thoughts, but part and pieces of it. No one in real life just vomits out
everything on their mind—not sane people.
The protagonist must be sane, or should be sane. The main point is we need to get the
characters and specifically the protagonist to the point where they can show us
their mind by personally telling us what they are thinking. As I noted, this is not completely unguarded. However, there is a way to bring the protagonist
mind as close as possible to the reader—the means is the protagonist’s
helper. I’ll get to this, next.
I’m a real fan of the protagonist’s helper. In popular literature and movies, the
protagonist’s helper is known as the sidekick.
However, this is a simplistic misnomer which pushes the comic attributes
of the protagonist’s helper as opposed to the very important quality of
allowing the reader to see the mind of the protagonist.
The main point of the protagonist’s helper is to
allow the Romantic protagonist to show their mind through deep dialog. The protagonist’s helper can be a friend to
the protagonist, but they can also be an manager, an associate, a love
interest, a secretary, an employee, a commander, a leader, a trainer or a
trainee, they can be anyone in the life of the protagonist who is close,
somewhat intimate, and able to listen and communicate at an equal or
significant level with the protagonist.
The protagonist’s helper should be a person
matched appropriately to the personality of the Romantic protagonist—and I
don’t mean in an accommodating sense. I routinely
use protagonist’s helpers in my novels, and I find them to be entertaining,
helpful, and powerful in the context of the novel. I’ve developed protagonist’s helpers for all
kinds of Romantic protagonist’s. Some
are manipulative and interested in love or maybe power, like Rose. Some are overpowered by their protagonist’s
helper and beaten mentally and physically into submission, like Shiggy (I mean
that tongue in cheek). Some are working
with self-conscious and quiet but conniving protagonist’s helpers like
Aksinya. The types and personalities of
the protagonist’s helper is as varied as the Romantic protagonist. Their power is that they allow the Romatntic
protagonist to speak their mind in dialog.
To provide this service, the protagonist’s helper
needs to be close and intimate with the protagonist. I’m not sure how much more I need to describe
or explain this, but I’ll plan to, next.
About the protagonist’s helper—the most effective
protagonist’s helper is the close friend who can advise the Romantic
protagonist. This becomes especially
important when we look at the other characteristics of the Romantic protagonist. The reason is that the protagonist’s helper
doesn’t just bring out the mind of the protagonist, he or she also reminds the protagonist
of their purpose, and when they don’t meet their own goals and moral compass.
This is the real power of the protagonist’s
helper—the ability to criticize and aid the Romantic protagonist in meeting
their goals. If you remember, in modern
writing, we show and don’t tell. The way
we show the mind of the protagonist is through their words in dialog. The sounding board needs to be someone they
trust and love—the protagonist’s helper is that sounding board. This closeness allows the Romantic
protagonist to say their mind and test ideas and their thoughts. This, in turn, allows the writer to show the
mind of the protagonist.
You might ask why this is so important? Let me tell you a little story. One of my prepublication readers asked why
some of my characters (the protagonists) from other novels seemed so harsh in other
or newer novels. I said, the characters
hadn’t changed at all—what changed was the introspection allowed and needed by
the Romantic protagonist. This is part
of the power of the Romantic protagonist and one of the reasons we love them so
much.
The ability to show the internal workings of the
mind of the protagonist allows this introspection and lets the reader see how
and what the protagonist is thinking.
This makes many of their actions completely understandable and
rational. When we take away the
introspection and knowing the mind of the character, suddenly their actions
become brusk and not justifiable. I
mention specifically Lumiere the protagonist of my novels Shadow of Light and
Shadow of Darkness. She is a
ruthless character, but when the reader sees the inmost working of her brain
with the strong lack of confidence she has, her actions become notably good and
rational. On the other hand, when
Lumiere must confront her daughter who has significant personal issues, Lumiere’s
approach and treatment seem callous and unkind.
As I wrote, Lumiere hates herself and hates what her daughter appears to
have become. This drives her, but
without the ability to know the mind of Lumiere, we have no perspective except
from the point of view (PoV) of her daughter Klava. Since we see Klava’s mind as well as her
issues, we know what Klava is going through.
Because of this, we forgive Klava, but not necessarily Lumiere.
I think this kind of power in a novel is
amazing. It brings into true relief the
mind and heart of the protagonist. It
makes us love the protagonist. Unfortunately,
it also makes us accept sometimes unhappy or perhaps less appropriate actions
and behavior. This is the nature of the
Romantic and the Romantic protagonist.
I’m done beating this subject, but there is still
more that you can build from this. Try
writing a protagonist’s helper and see if it doesn’t improve your writing and
almost any novel. I’ll move on to power,
next.
4. Power (skills and abilities) and leadership
that are outside of the normal society.
The Romantic protagonist doesn’t start with any
power at all—the power is all potential locked away in their skills and
abilities. As in life, so it is in
novels. Many people have great skills
and potential abilities, but they never expend the effort to produce great
skills and abilities. There is also
leadership, but I’ll get to that later.
The skills and abilities of the Romantic
protagonist are all built to world-class levels by the hard work of the
Romantic protagonist. This is the
greatest attribute of the Romantic protagonist.
This is also the epitome of what is called the American Dream. The Romantic protagonist was and is the
embodiment of the American Dream. This
is the idea that hard work, and I mean hard work, will always result in great
success. You don’t have to call this the
American Dream because to some degree today, this potential for success and
this capability is available in many other nations, but at the time, only
America and generally, today, only America allows this degree of success for
the common person.
Now, some will say this idea is outdated or
untrue, but the numerous examples of amazing success because of hard work just
make this obviously completely true.
Where else, other than the USA can one of the billionaires in the world
be a black woman who started life in the middle class? Or where else can you have many women
entrepreneurs of all kinds of skin tan and groups be millionaires and
billionaires? Where else can men or
women from poverty and even with the racism in the south end up on the Supreme
Court or in federal politics? You never
or rarely will see this in the stratified class structure of other nations, but
in the USA it is common. So common that
many who will not work and who certainly don’t work hard wonder at their lack
of success. Indeed, the real power of
the Romantic protagonist is that they embody this greatness through hard work
theme. The success of this type of
individual in the USA at especially the beginning of the Victorian Era (from
about 1850 on) reflected in some Victorian Era novels, but took off at the
beginning of the Twentieth Century and the beginning of the so called Modern
Era of writing. The greatest successes
in writing were not the Modern authors as much as the Romantic writers who rose
out of this time. They came out of it
because they were reflecting the American Dream in their characters and
writing. We are writing about the exact
opposite of Of Mice and Men which is a Modern Era novel written by
Steinbeck. In this novel, lazy and
mentally insane criminals rape and murder a young girl because they can. This is the opposite of the American
Dream. Is it any surprise that teachers
have to force kids to read this kind of propaganda trash that depicts the
horrors of uncontrolled and unbridled humanity?
Compare this to works like Ivanhoe, even Oliver Twist, Tarzan,
and all the other moral and ethical novels that depict a protagonist you can
love and copy as a person. It isn’t just
Of Mice and Men, there are examples throughout the so called Modern Era
of novels and protagonists who are worthless and unfixable. These are not the stuff of the classics or of
bestsellers, in my opinion. In any case,
let’s continue to focus on the Romantic protagonist and see where this gets us
for a character. I’ll continue to look
at power.
Everyone desires real power, but what is real
power? Real power is the ability to motivate
and excite people to action. Sometimes
our modern writers forget this—I mean specifically Harry Potty where someone
encouraged Rowling to make Harry more human and less of a Romantic protagonist. A snotty, mean, and morose protagonist is someone
no one can love—and so goes Harry.
The most powerful and entertaining and lovable
Romantic protagonists are those who never seek leadership or power but who
achieve that characteristic none-the-less.
Let me tell you a secret about life.
In life, real leaders are the ones we readers used to hate. You know, the ones who always got picked and
picked the other kids for sports and games.
The readers were the ones who were picked last and never were the
leaders. I know the world likes to
portray the world differently than this, but this is the way of the world. If you want to be good in sports, it’s hard
to take lots of time for reading and study.
Those with power tend to be those who, yes, in the old days got the Cs
and bullied the rest of us who were getting the As. Today, since everyone gets an A, they skate
by while the readers still read, and the bullying is worse than ever.
The reason readers love Romantic protagonists is
because they were never the bullies.
They were never those who got picked or picked others for sports—the
Romantic protagonists are those who gain leadership because of their knowledge
and skill, usually a skill in an intellectual capacity. The modern magical realism movement has mix
the intellectual capacity and knowledge into an activity—magic.
Magic is the epitome of the power idea of the
Romantic protagonist although this power can be wielded through other
means. The other means are usually
knowledge, reason, and intellect. That
is what readers want and what readers crave.
It isn’t the real world, but it should be, right. That’s not to say there are not leaders of
this caliber in the world—that is leaders who are intellects, and who lead
through the mutual acceptance of others.
Here is the picture of the leadership of the Romantic
protagonist. They reluctantly accept the
leadership role because everyone demands they lead. They don’t want to lead, and they don’t like
to lead, but they lead, none-the-less. This
is the opposite of leadership and what we consider skills in our society. This is why we write that the Romantic
protagonist has skills outside of the norm for society. This is also why magic and psionics as well
as intellect and knowledge are hallmarks of the skills of the Romantic
protagonist. This is also why science
fiction has accepted the Romantic protagonist as almost a norm while other
genres are less enthusiastic. I’m not certain
why they are less enthusiastic—the Romantic protagonist is what most readers
love and want in a protagonist. They
really do hate the very idea of leaders and leadership by strength and might—they
love the idea of leadership by knowledge and intellect. In the real world, would they follow such a
leader, not likely, but that’s the suspension of disbelief that writers do.
The main point, and I’ll make this again, is that
we are basically always working in a reflected worldview in writing. This is whether we will or no. Our readers want a certain reality in
writing, writers accommodate, or not. I
think that those who accommodate the readers generally produce the bestsellers
and the most popular novels, but that’s not always true either. I’ll move on to melancholy, next.
5. Melancholy
Melancholy is a major characteristic of every
Romantic protagonist, and because it is misunderstood in the modern era, I
always need to provide a definition. So,
here it is:
Around the 15th century the connotation of
melancholy began to change noticeably, shifting from simply negative, irritable
emotions to something more introspective and perhaps a sign of artistic or
intellectual talent, as revealed by the third definition in the OED, which
describes melancholy as “sadness, dejection, esp. of a pensive nature;
gloominess; pensiveness or introspection; an inclination or tendency to this.”
In a curious note, the definition also mentions that “In the Elizabethan
period, and for some centuries thereafter, the affectation of melancholy was a
fashionable mark of intellectual or aesthetic refinement.”
When we write melancholy, this is basically what
we mean. The modern term melancholy
which is specifically associated with depression and mental illness is not the
same sense as the intellectual melancholy of the Romantic protagonist. So, what is the personality of the Romantic
protagonist like, if it is melancholy?
The word introspective is exactly what melancholy
in this sense means. There is more
however, and that more is the reaction of the Romantic protagonist. Their usual reaction to happiness is pensive
reflection. Their reaction to sadness is
pensive reflection. Their reaction to
anything is pensive reflection. That is
the mind and main external characteristic of the Romantic protagonist.
I was thinking that I should just replace
melancholy with introspection, but that doesn’t fully and correctly define the
Romantic protagonist. It isn’t really
accurate to describe the Romantic protagonist as just sad or down or depressed
either, although that is the main definition today for melancholy. Perhaps the best description for melancholy
is introspective pensive reflection.
The Romantic protagonist is always involved in
introspective pensive reflection as an embodiment of their character and
being. Hamlet and Sara Crew show this
detached pensive introspection. They are
not bland characters at all, but they are serious characters. Perhaps, serious, is the main character trait
we can pull from this concept of melancholy.
The Romantic protagonist is always serious about everything. They are never frivolous. The world and their world is always serious
and their work in the world is always important. Of all my characters in all my novels,
perhaps Rose is the best embodiment of this seriousness as a melancholic
trait. I’ll expand on this example,
next.
I developed Rose as the perfect Romantic
protagonist. I did it on this blog. Rose was an abandoned and abused child who
taught herself to survive. She displays
this perfect melancholic personality.
Her protagonist’s helper and mentor is Shiggy. Shiggy is exuberant and outgoing. Rose is quiet, reserved, introspective,
aristocratic, and observant. What is
different between Shiggy and Rose is that Shiggy started like Rose in many
ways, but Shiggy has changed to the person she is today. Rose changes but not nearly as much as
Shiggy.
I retain Rose as this perfect Romantic
protagonist even when she moves from the protagonist to the protagonist’s
helper. What is Rose like? Rose is the person hiding in the corner
watching everything around her. Even
when Rose forces herself to take her place, we see the introspective nature of
her mind and thinking. Even when she is
acting completely off the wall as an aristocratic celebrity, she is still
completely introspective and observant.
When she is the Romantic protagonist we get to see her mind from her
dialog as the Romantic protagonist. When
she is the protagonist’s helper, we show this introspection in a little
different manner, but she has the same introspection. That’s the point.
The big deal about the protagonist is that the Point
of View (PoV) is usually through that person.
When we move the PoV to another character, then we can’t show the
introspection as well but that doesn’t mean it isn’t the same introspection—it
just means that we see that introspection in a different way. We see it through the eyes of the new
protagonist.
I want to emphasize that Rose starts as a perfect
wallflower type of character. Left to
her own, she would continue to be a wallflower, content in that role. However, due to her skills and abilities, she
is forced to move out of the corner. Her
personality doesn’t change, her reactions to them do.
So, how do we set this up? The Romantic protagonist is melancholic and
introspective. They are not very
excitable. They keep their minds
generally to themselves, but with the help of a protagonist’s helper or other
character, we get them to draw out their thoughts. We show their thoughts to the reader with
dialog and actions. This trait is loved
by most readers. The reason is that most
readers, if they aren’t just like this, want to be like this. Most readers imagine they are melancholy and
introspective in this manner, even if they aren’t. I’ll explain that, next.
What most appeals to readers is when characters
are like them think they are. Not
necessarily as they are, but as they think they are. It’s similar to leadership. Most readers think they want to be lead by
other readers. Let’s hope our leaders
are readers, but most of the time, leaders are similar to the kids on the
playground who exerted authority through force and coercion. That’s because kids do that. Education makes people realize that force and
coercion can only get you too far, unless you are Stalin, Mao, Hitler, or Genghis
Kan. Actually almost all tyrants use
force or coercion, but these don’t work well in market based and capitalistic
societies. Children in these societies
either learn these lessons early or end up being your terrible boss later
on—you know the one you quit the company to get away from.
This is an important concept wrapped up in an
idea for great literature. The main
point for me is to give the readers what they want. I’m a reader, I want my leaders to be
readers. I want them to be introspective
and unflappable. The problem is the
introspective and unflappable tend to be very poor leaders. The best leaders are filled with excitement
and decisive. That’s really what makes a
great leader, but most readers don’t really think they want this type of
leader. They do, they just need the moderating
that a really great leader can provide.
In other words, all that leadership training you got—it really is there
to moderate the gung ho type of leadership model into one that appeals to
everyone. The gung ho model is still the
best one, but readers or the intellectual especially need a little different
approach that still ends up with the same gung ho. So, what does this have to do with writing?
Everything.
The reader wants their protagonist to be a great leader, but they want
their protagonist to be a reluctant leader.
They want their leader to be intellectual and reflective while being
gung ho and leading from the front. They
want their protagonist to be a mentor, a friend, a helper, a brain, but never
make them feel abandoned, unloved, unhelped, or stupid. This is the Romantic protagonist.
The Romantic protagonist is melancholy. They don’t want to lead, but are the best to
be the leader. They are the kid on the
playground that all the intellectual kids ask to be the leader. You can see the irony in that. No intellectual kid would ever think another
would be a better leader than they are.
That’s part of the entire leader and intellectual experience. I’m not giving you an irony here, but rather
a in depth view of what readers want. I’m
afraid that some modern writers misunderstand this reluctance and think that
fear, cowardice, lack of decision-making, indecisiveness, and immaturity should
be characteristics of the modern protagonist.
I hate these kinds of characters.
I certainly don’t write them, and I advise against them. It’s against this background that I should
write about the courage of the Romantic protagonist, but I rightly moved that
lower on the list. I’ll look at a more
important characteristic from the common.
We should be able to see about leadership in this subject too.
6. From the common and potentially the rural.
I love this story so I’ll tell it again. In the Victorian Era, the major plot for
almost every novel was “blood will out” or fate. Most specifically, blood will out is the plot
of Oliver Twist among almost every other novel. It is the idea that wealth and aristocracy
will always win over skill and the impoverished. The aristocracy and wealthy bought most of
the novels in that time, so it was a very popular trope and plot. If you pick up these novels, especially the less
classical ones today, you will find the scholarship students are always abused
and beaten by the wealthy and the aristocrats.
Generally, the aristocrats always look down on and gloat over their
power and birth, because it’s always about birth. Look at Bleak House, where the
protagonist can never succeed although skilled and capable or Olivier Twist where
the protagonist is really a born aristocrat and will succeed without any other characteristic. Even The Little Princess has this
basic cast—the wealthy Sara will end up resolving the telic flaw because she is
the wealthy Sara. Oh well, how did we
get out of this mess?
Well, the market for novels changed as the poor
and common got a little education. Funny
how when people have opportunities and reasonable calorie intake, especially
meat and protein, they begin to show enormous capability. The poor were unable to compete with the
aristocratic and wealthy when they were in a starvation culture. They were weaker, less intelligent, and
smaller. With the industrial revolution,
and the American revolution, that changed radically.
Aristocrats and the wealthy could not compete
with the common children, now scholarship students who got similar calories and
who were filled with hope and drive because of the new opportunities open to
them. This revolution really started in
the USA, but moved quickly to Europe and the UK. The real power of this drive in literature
was the advent of the modern Romantic protagonist.
In the Victorian Era, the protagonist was
aristocratic or wealthy and always going to succeed because “blood will
out.” In the Modern Era with the modern
Romantic protagonist, suddenly the common would make their way to the top and
hold it because they came from the common.
Their drive and skills would make them competitive and able to beat the
aristocrats and rich kids. This became
the basis for almost every novel and especially kid’s novel after the Victorian
Era. You can see it in some Victorian
Era writing like Robert Louis Stevenson.
Look at Treasure Island or Kidnapped. Most of Stevenson’s novels have Romantic
protagonists in the modern style. There
is more to this, and I’ll look at the characteristic in the Romantic
protagonist, next.
The history of the common basis for the Romantic
protagonist is very important, however, although from the common is an
important idea even today, the most important point about from the common is
zero to hero.
We can actually see zero to hero as a plot type
in Victorian and earlier literature, but “blood will out,” pretty much overcame
or overshadowed this very important idea.
From the common comes out of the idea of aristocracy and wealth—zero to
hero can be about anyone. We see zero to
hero in Sara Crew (A Little Princess) and in Oliver Twist. That’s not to say the Victorians saw the
same. It’s just that the idea of zero to
hero made sense to them and to the many impoverished readers of these
novels. However, everyone knew the
outcome—only the aristocratic or wealthy could be assured of success and being
a hero. Certainly, in the Victorian mind
only the aristocratic or wealthy could ever be a hero—then the common people
began to beat out the aristocratic and wealthy in school and industry. The world changed for the better. The zero to hero completely based on the common
person achieving, but something happened in the culture. We moved in the USA and many other nations
from a starvation culture to one where the average person could expect some
degree of wealth and success no matter what their birth. This happened first in the USA with the
ability to own property (real estate), but soon took over the first world. In fact, property ownership is a hallmark of
the first world. When the heroes were
able to have wealth and position, zero to hero suddenly makes much more sense
than from the common. However, I still
advise using from the common when it makes sense. The main point is this—your Romantic
protagonist must be zero at some point, their background usually doesn’t matter
much. A great example comes from Sara
Crew.
Now, Sara Crew is definitely not from the
common. She is set in a blood will out
plot, but she goes from hero to zero and then back again. Oliver Twist is the same. He starts at zero and becomes the hero. These are both blood will out plots, but the
authors saw the power in bringing their characters from zero to hero, and this
is the ultimate plot in every comedy novel.
Opps, I need to write about what is comedy and what is tragedy. That’s next.
What is comedy and what is tragedy? This used to be a very important question in studying
and teaching literature. It seems like
this isn’t taught well or at all anymore.
That’s very sad. These are very
simple terms. Comedy is a story where
the protagonist overcomes the telic flaw—basically, zero to hero. Tragedy is where the telic flaw overcomes the
protagonist—basically, hero to zero.
There you have every plot possible in any writing or any other
story. I’ll focus on comedy because
that’s generally what people want to read today. These are the kinds of novels I like to read
and to write.
So, this brings us to the basic zero to hero
plot. Even with blood will out or a fate
plot, the zero to hero plot is the basis for the entire plot. This is just how plots and excitement in
writing works. By the way, it works in
every kind of creative endeavor.
If we realize all comedy novels are based on the
zero to hero plot, this should make the development of the novel easy. You can start with any type of protagonist,
drive them or start them at zero and then build them to hero. That’s the way it works. The power of the historical Romantic
protagonist is that they begin at zero—they are part of the common.
What is the common? In the past, before about 1800 and even until
about 1900, the common was always the mass of humanity who were not
aristocratic or wealthy. The reason was
that until around 1800 in the USA and 1900 in the rest of the West, every
culture was a starvation culture. Only
the USA and Europe through capitalism and free markets as well as property
ownership moved out of starvation cultures an into a truly middle class society
where the greatest evidence of poverty is obesity. In the Western world, no one is
starving. In fact, as I noted, poverty
means obesity in the West which is an interesting problem in itself. By the way, the obesity isn’t because of bad
diets—its caused by too many calories. Too
much money and too little work and exercise.
Funny that.
In any case, before the modern era, the common
came from this group of impoverished and starving. This was the common. The great changes in nutrition for the
so-called working poor, brough millions into the competitive marketplace of the
middle class. The common began to take
scholarships and win the prizes in schools and universities. This resulted in the wealthy ensuring they
had no competition by creating government run schools. With government run education, the wealthy
could still send their children to private schools to get a real education
while the common suffered in the incompetent socialist institutions. It shouldn’t be a surprise that in the USA,
the first government controlled schools began in Massachusetts in the 1830s
while they started after 1900 in Britain.
By moving all the competition from the private to public institutions,
the wealthy and aristocratic could get rid of those pesky competitive common
people—plus the inferior education would ensure the common wouldn’t be able to
compete. This is the way it works
today. The wealthy and aristocratic
(politicians) would never send their child or children to the government
controlled schools. They always place
them in private and parochial. In fact,
about 20% of teachers place their children in the private and parochial school. In Britain, it is almost impossible for the common
to enter into a private school—the competition is too great and the lack of
learning too much to move from the British schools to either the Grammar or the
private.
So where are we?
In the modern era of writing, the favorite means of Romantic protagonist
development was from the common (and rural).
This means the normal not aristocratic and the poor. This was easy since it was most of the
population. Since most schools were all
private in the USA and Britain, the end result was pretty uniform, the common
student (our Romantic protagonist) would come in on a scholarship, work very
hard, take all the honors, and win the day.
This was easy as a zero to hero.
Today, this is more difficult.
I’ll get to that, next.
Really, from the common is not the same as it was
back in the day, and even in “the day,” the aspect of the society was changing
to make the common more common, but more like the previous world’s aristocrats
and wealthy.
What happened was capitalism and property ownership. The result was a common who was literally fat
and sassy—also the main market for our novels.
I don’t mean that as a pejorative, but rather as a characteristic. The average reader still sees themselves as
the middle class and common—very few think of themselves as aristocratic or
wealthy. Those that do, either hide it
or ignore it. Every read the Millionaire
Next Door? That is the new
America. Now, back to the common.
The entire reason I’m bringing up the above is
that this notion or idea of the common is still a viable approach to the Romantic
protagonist. You can develop zero to
hero plots from it, and I’ve given many examples in the past about how to make
this work. I’ll also add to that, from
the rural. Why from the rural?
The rural has been viewed historically as the most
common of common. Dorathy goes to the
big city. The British Romantic
protagonists go from their farms and villages up to town (London). Part of the power of the Romantic protagonist
that we will look at later is isolation which brings out their skills and
abilities. The rural is part of
this.
When I look at my Romantic protagonists (all my
protagonists), I see many are isolated and rural to begin with. This is part of the charm of the Romantic
protagonist. This is also part of the
pathos development of the Romantic protagonist.
It isn’t an accident that Rose is isolated and alone
in a rural and isolated environment. She
is almost a special case—a person so isolated that she doesn’t know the basics
of human interaction or normal human life.
This is a real structured and intentional use of zero to hero. The point being to start the Romantic protagonist
at the lowest zero possible. Why is this
a good idea?
I’ve been trying to make the point from the
beginning. I’ll finalize it here. When we read any comedy, the plot is zero to
hero. No matter the starting point of
the protagonist, we must move them to zero or start them at zero. The average and not so average reader loves a
protagonist who is from their background and position in life. Since almost every reader in the modern era
views themselves as the common or at least the middle class—the norm, they want
to see your protagonists come from this background, and the lower the
better. The average reader might have
never been hungry, abused, cold, in any terrible condition, but they can
imagine it. Your job is to make them a
protagonist who lives in these conditions, but who rises above them to success—zero
to hero.
So, as I recommend, you should begin your
protagonist at some zero. The best is
the common and the lowest state of the common that is possible. The rural can also play very well into this
equation, but a low end urbanite will work well. It’s more difficult to play the plot from a
suburban local, but possible. One of my
favorite novels about this is The Least of These about a child in a
suburban environment who is isolated, alone, and parentless. I used the idea for Nikita in my science
fiction novel Regia Anglorum from the protagonist, a Romantic protagonist
from that novel. In any case, part of
the power of the Romantic protagonist comes from this common and potentially
rural background because it is pathos building in the reader. That’s where we will go, next.
7. Pathos developed because the character does
not fit the cultural mold. From the
common.
Pathos is not characteristic of the Romantic
protagonist, but rather a reflection of the protagonist in the reader. Pathos is the correct or proper emotion
experienced by the reader as a result of the protagonist. Pathos is caused by the protagonist.
As an example, I’ll go back to my favorite from The
Little Princess. Sara Crew is hungry,
abused, and worn out. She is sent out into
the freezing British day to buy items from the market. On the way, she finds a coin, a sixpence, I believe. She begins to enter a bakery to buy hot cross
buns for herself, but sees a beggar girl on the stoop of the bakery and buys her
buns, but gives six of the seven to the beggar child.
I’m just giving a synopsis of the scene, but the emotional
response of the reader is intense. The
emotional response of the characters is not at all that same as the
reader. Sara is hungry, but happy. The shopkeeper is surprised but happy and
take in the beggar child. The beggar
child is happy to have some food. If
everyone is so happy, why is the reader breaking down in tears? That is pathos and properly developed
pathos. This is what a properly
developed Romantic protagonist gives us from the very beginning. The
characteristic of the Romantic protagonist is the development of this pathos,
so how do we do it? How do we make pathos
in the reader?
Sara Crew gives us great examples. I’ll move into the how to, next.
You always need and want to develop pathos in
your readers—that is what writing and art is all about. Yes, even in the visual arts, you want to
bring pathos into your readers—what is pathos?
Pathos is the appropriate emotional response from
your readers (viewers). I mentioned
viewers again because art and literature is only about building proper and
appropriate emotions in our readers (viewers).
Just remember, this all applies to viewers as well as readers.
Pathos is the proper emotional response. Bathos is the improper emotional response. In classical terms, pathos is the ridiculous to
the sublime, while bathos is from the sublime to the ridiculous. What this means is the reflection of the
suspension of disbelief in terms of emotions.
The author suspends the disbelief of the reader and produces a world and
a circumstance that might be impossible in the real world or even in a fantasy
world, but a circumstance that draws the reader into the world and into the
plot. The suspension of disbelief is
this power in writing that draws the readers in and makes the novel hard to put
down. This is what makes a reader read
and not stop. The reason we call this
the ridiculous is that many times the circumstances of the plot and story are
so impossible only the magic of the writer can make this happen. This is the real and true power of
words. We turn pictures into words and
convey them to the minds of our readers.
As I wrote, the power we want and need to wield is pathos.
Pathos means the reader is crying when they
should, laughing when they should, and angry when they should be. This is the sublime. Bathos is when in a very sad and emotional
scene in a book or movie, the audience breaks out into laughter. You see it occasionally in movies or
television. You see this a lot in modern
art. Instead of emotion, the viewer
laughs or snorts or just gives a puzzled look.
If you can’t understand it, you can’t properly reflect pathos. In fact, the only logical response is
bathos.
Now that I’ve explained it, I’ll give you some
ideas how to build it, next.
How to build pathos? Pathos is not a characteristic of the
protagonist or other character. Pathos
is a reaction by the reader to the protagonist or other character. However, the protagonist and characters are
used to make pathos in the reader. The
big question is how do we do this. I
like to start the characters in pathos conditions although Sara Crew is an
example of a character who is brought into pathos conditions—she goes from hero
to zero and then back again.
Starting in pathos is easy. All you need to do is create a situation for
the protagonist that places them in pathos conditions. What is a pathos condition? If we start our character in poverty where
they are hungry, sick, abused, cold, have to work hard as a child, and so
on. When you start the character out, if
you begin with the character in these circumstances, then you have them at zero
and the rest of the plot and storyline can be about the character moving from
that zero to the hero. What the hero
looks like is part of the design of the novel.
I made Rose this way.
Rose was a child who had been abandoned by her family
through the death of her father and grandparents. Her mother just left. Rose lived alone in an partially abandoned
house. It was a vacation home, on Rousay
Island in the Orkney Islands. She lived
without any modern conveniences, caught or foraged everything she ate, and
lived to read the many books in the attic of the house. That’s how Shiggy found her. Rose basically started at a zero, and then
Shiggy found her.
On the other hand, Shiggy had everything. She was a Ph.D. Had a position at Oxford. Was trained by multiple agencies under the
British MI structure. In this we have a
character at the peak of being a hero, but then we bring Shiggy down to zero in
the first chapter of the novel.
So the big deal is we need to bring the
protagonist to a zero—this begins the ability to make a character develop
pathos in a reader. I’ll explain why and
how this develops pathos, next.
If your character, your Romantic protagonist,
starts in a pathos developing situation such as hungry, abused, alone,
isolated, unloved, and all, this is like starting with a kitten video. Your readers begin loving and having feelings
for your character. Few people cannot
view a kitten video without feeling filled with warmth and interest in the
kitten. Few readers can observe a
characters who is impoverished and in terrible conditions without wanting to
help them. However, the author needs to
be very careful not to waste the power of the situation. How can you screw it up?
Now, you can write a very unlikeable character on
purpose, but usually the reason for placing a character at zero physically is
to build pathos from the beginning, however, the character can be so unlikeable
that the pathos conditions are wasted.
As I wrote, these characteristics can be intentional because you can
start with a haughty and mean impoverished person to drive them to a mental
zero. The main question, at the moment,
is what mental or emotional characteristics make a character unlikeable?
Perhaps it’s best to write about what makes a
character unlikeable. I’ll get to that,
next.
I’ve got way too many bread crumbs in this file—I
need to cut them back. Let’s go for what
makes a character not pathos developing.
I wrote that you can start the protagonist at zero by having them impoverished
and all, but you can ruin the character or perhaps place them in a situation where
they can be brought to a zero. So how
can we intentionally or unintentionally make a character unlikeable or not a
zero—let’s look at this.
The worst for readers is a character who can’t
and doesn’t want to read. Now, this type
of character is redeemable—if they learn to read and fall in love with
reading. However, a character who doesn’t
like to read and will not read, is a character who readers will hate—that’s
because readers love readers or at least those who want to read. This is one of the reasons Harry Potty is really
disliked by many readers—he doesn’t like to read or study. He is the antithesis of the kind of character
most readers love and enjoy. Plus, Harry
is irredeemable—he won’t change.
Other characteristics of the protagonist readers
love to hate is the haughty, the mean, the not very nice, the cruel, and so
on. You can start with a character who
is otherwise in sorry straights as a mean and haughty person. The problem here is you will likely need to
take them to a zero because of this situation.
This can make a great kind of novel—in fact, I’m contemplating just this
kind of character with Aine.
The mean and cruel character must definitely be adjusted
and fixed. As I noted you should just take
the character to zero and then build them back again. This is especially important for the
protagonist.
If you do have a protagonist who has unlikable or
non-Romantic characteristics, you must do something about these before you can
redeem them. For example, I’ve used the
common as an example. You can actually have
a Romantic protagonist who doesn’t come from the common—they could be aristocratic
or wealthy, but you need to take them to zero.
Taking an aristocrat to zero is pretty easy. Bradly in the Flavia de Luca novels does a
great job of this. Flavia de Luca is an impoverished
aristocrat—how can this be? She comes
from the aristocrats in the 1950s who had poured much of their livelihood and
valuables into the British war effort during World War Two, and the inheritance
and socialistic land and income taxes basically stole their estates out from
under them. She is an aristocrat
fighting to maintain and keep her property.
My character, Azure Rose is similar. Her father cheated the crown, so he went to
prison while she went to foster care and her estate was taken by the
crown. Azure Rose is really the Lady
Rose Wisheart, but she is as poor as a church mouse and is on scholarship to
her school. This is a great zero, and a
wonderful way to develop a Romantic protagonist. This is much harder to do with wealth. Usually, you have to take away the wealth to
get to the proper common for your Romantic protagonist. If you note, the loss of aristocracy and the
loss of wealth can produce wonderful pathos in your readers. The protagonist is upset by it, but the
readers are incised over it—usually.
This moves us to the next point of pathos—estranged. We’ll look at that, next.
8. Pathos bearing because he or she is estranged
from family or normal society by death, exclusion for some reason, or
self-isolation due to three above.
Who doesn’t love little orphan Annie? Well actually, once you get to know her, you
kinda don’t. That’s an author killing
pathos—it’s like Harry Potty. Orphans
make great Romantic protagonists. In
fact almost any estranged child makes a great pathos developing protagonist—thus
Oliver Twist and David Copperfield. Then
there is Harry Potty. Harry Potty starts
out as a great pathos bearing character, then he becomes a wealthy aristocrat
who is the hero of the wizarding world before he’s taken a poop on his
own. This doesn’t totally ruin his
pathos development, but one of the most important qualities of the pathos
creating character is that their problems are not caused by them. A kid can’t fix the problem of a missing parent
for any reason. This is why the pathos in
this case is relationship based and not just existence based, but it’s pretty
much the same. Any child stuck in
poverty can’t usually change that situation in any way. Any child who is estranged from their family,
society, or culture can’t help or change this problem. The same is true to some degree for adults as
well as children, but adults and even certain types of children as less pathos
developing than others. The problem for
them is the perception of the reader.
This is why I mentioned Little Orphan Annie and Harry Potty
specifically. Little Orphan Annie is a
roust-about. She is an instigator, a
power child, a child who has learned to live in and with adversity. Annie of Green Gables is similar, although
the author did a little better job making her clutzy and ignorant enough that
you know she needs help. It really helps
Annie of Green Gables pathos that she was and is continually unwanted because
she is a girl on a farm. On the other
hand, Little Orphan Annie is wanted and loved from the beginning of her life
with Daddy Warbucks. The lesson here is
make your Romantic protagonist competent, but not competent enough to be alone
and isolated without any issues. What do
I mean by that?
Let’s look at Harry Potty. He starts perfectly as an unwanted,
estranged, and abused child. His parents
are dead. He lives with his horrid aunt,
uncle, and cousin. He is hated and
abused. He is also very incompetent with
few skills and really not abilities to make him shine. This is a very strong pathos generating
character. It’s especially powerful
because we know that he is a special child even though estranged and abandoned. This would be a great pathos developing
protagonist if the author could have kept the problems going, but she doesn’t. As soon as Harry gets a connection to the wizarding
world he goes from zero to hero in an instant and that’s basically the end of
his pathos developing power. This is
very important. I’ll explain more, next.
In pointing out how authors can submarine their own
pathos development, I’m giving you an example of how not to develop your characters. You definitely want to not take your
protagonist to hero before the climax of the novel. You can already see the Harry Potty problem
for what it is—he’s a hero before the middle of the first novel. Then we get a new plot that is tacked onto
the first. Plus, one of the most
irritating features of the first Harry Potty novel, and in fact, all the Harry
Potty novels is the deus ex machina of the reveal, well foreshadowed, that
Harry is the messiah. If you remember,
the Romantic protagonist is characterized by learning a skill and then working
and developing that skill by great, nearly inhuman effort to make that skill
the greatest in the worldview of the novel.
If you wanted to write a proper Harry Potty
character, you can make them special, not because they are a messiah, foreordained
to save the wizarding world, but rather a common regular human born with
magical powers who is put upon even in the wizarding world but who works overtime
to develop those magic skills and then succeeds because of them—wow, that sure
sounds like Hermione and not Harry. Funny
how their names both start with H, but Harry is also an inbreed prince and so
is Harry Potty. I would have made
Hermione the protagonist. She would have
been the muggle who became the greatest witch of her time—not the inbreed
prince who is a messiah.
In any case, Harry Potty starts as a very
potentially powerful protagonist and then turns into a hero mid-novel, and that’s
about it. The rest is just posturing and
scene writing in a general novel form.
Don’t get me wrong, the novels a okay, but they could have been so much
more. The lesson is to not ruin your
characters before they even have a chance to shine. The hero part needs to happen when the climax
occurs and never before. I’ve given a
negative example, let me provide a positive one from a Romantic protagonist
perspective. That’s next.
9. Overwhelming desire to change and grow—to
develop four and one.
10. Regret when they can’t follow their own moral
compass.
11. Self-criticism when they can’t follow their
own moral compass.
12. Courageous
13. Travel plot
14. Love interest
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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