Writer’s Toolbox

Ask The Writer

Your most pressing and perplexing questions about writing answered here by Gotham teacher Brandi Reissenweber.

Character

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My character has a unique situation that I need to establish early on. Is it okay to summarize this before starting the action of the story?

When creating a character, always look for ways to “show" the character—through action, dialogue, thought, or appearance—rather than “tell" about the character. This engages the reader more fully and keeps the focus on the action of the story. In Lou Mathews' short story “Crazy Life," we learn about the narrator, Dulcie, and her boyfriend Chuey's current situation in the first paragraph:

Chuey called me from the jail. He said it was all a big mistake. I said, Sure Chuey, like always, que no? What is it this time, weed or wine? He said it was something different this time. I said, You mean like reds, angel dust, what? Chuey says, No Dulcie, something worse.
The story opens in action: Chuey's phone call from jail. Through their conversation—as recounted by Dulcie—we learn Chuey is often in trouble, that Dulcie has come to expect this, and is somewhat cynical about it. As the conversation unfolds, however, we learn something is different about this trouble; it's “worse" than the usual. This handful of sentences give us a bit about Dulcie and Chuey's history as a couple while keeping us firmly rooted in the unfolding action of the story.


Not all stories plummet right to the heart of the matter in the opening sentences. Some are slower in showing the character's unique situation before getting to the crux of what makes this day different than any other. Claire Davis' short story “Labors of the Heart" begins like this:

The remarkable thing in dreams: People say what he never hears in waking. Fat. They say it to his face, not behind his back, or clear of earshot. The word is succulent in their mouths—“faaat"—stretching out like the waist on his sansabelt pants. Nothing derogatory about it, only an unabashed honesty. On these mornings, for a few moments, he wakes feeling curiously relieved.
It is not until about one page into the story that Pinky meets Rose in the grocery store—and is forever changed. Still, Davis anchors us in specificity: the nature of his dreams and his feeling of relief upon waking from such dreams.


No matter what your character's back story, you can convey it succinctly while keeping the reader engaged in the moment-to-moment experience of the story.