Guest Post by Claudia Mills
One of the most powerful questions
for launching a story is: what does my main character want? So simple and obvious - and yet even experienced authors can
forget this.
As I was writing my most recent
book, Nixie Ness, Cooking Star, set
in an after-school cooking camp, at first I focused only on Nixie’s predicament. Now that her mother has a
job outside the home, Nixie has to attend an after-school program, which means
she’ll no longer be spending afternoons at home with her best friend, Grace,
which means Grace will be spending afternoons instead with Nixie’s nemesis,
Elyse. But what should happen next? I was stuck until I asked the crucial
question: what does Nixie want? Well,
she wants her life to be the way it used to be. But this is such a vague and
hopeless desire. The story came into focus for me when I gave a different
answer: Nixie feels she is losing her best friend, and she wants to get her
best friend back again.
Once we know what our character
wants, the plot is driven by what she does to get it. If her first attempt
succeeds, we have a very short and skimpy story. But if her first attempt
fails, and her second attempt fails, and even her third attempt fails, her
ultimate success is much more satisfying.
If your students are stuck for a
story idea, encourage them to think of what a character might want. They might start by thinking about
what they want. A bike? A dog? A
sleepover with a friend? A special family vacation?
Then lead them in brainstorming how
someone could try to get this thing. With brainstorming, even preposterous
ideas are welcome. Remember it’s good if the first ideas end up failing! One of
Nixie’s failed friendship-saving ideas is to get fame and fortune by starring
in the cooking-camp video. Another is to bribe her friend with yummy camp-baked
treats. A third is to pretend to be sick at camp in order to guilt her mother
into quitting her job.
For young writers, simple wants,
simple strategies, and simple failures can work best.
Your character wants a bike. How could he get a bike?
1. Find a job and save up money to
buy one.
2. Win one in a contest.
3. Get a friend to trade his bike
for something he wants even more.
Then, the really fun part: How
could each of these ideas go wrong? Failure can be one of the most comical
things to write about – and one of the saddest. And then the success that
follows is sweeter still.
Nixie ends up keeping her best
friend, but in the process she realizes Grace can still be her friend even if
Grace is now friends with Elyse, too. It’s fine if a story ends with a
character coming to a new understanding of what she wants.
But knowing what your character
wants is where a story begins.
Claudia Mills is the author of almost
60 books for young readers, including most recently the Franklin School Friends
series from Farrar, Straus & Giroux, and her new After-School Superstars
series from Holiday House. In addition
to writing books, she has been a college professor in the philosophy department
at the University of Colorado at Boulder and in the graduate programs in
children’s literature at Hollins University in Roanoke. Visit Claudia at
www.claudiamillsauthor.com.
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