What Your Character Says Matters

by Liz Johnson, @lizjohnsonbooks

What your character says matters. Not just for the story (although dialogue is important to moving the plot forward). It matters for creating characters that come alive.

Specific dialects can be important for establishing the setting or the background of the character. But let’s go beyond how a character speaks into what they say.

In Rebecca Stead’s Liar & Spy, the twelve-year-old hero’s dad often begins conversations with these three words. “Tell me things.” That simple phrase speaks volumes about the character. Without knowing anything else about him, we know that he’s inviting, curious, open-minded, inquisitive, and caring.

Three words are all it takes to create a picture of the heart of this man, and I love him already.

Spoken words have the power to reveal the depth of a character. So don’t waste them.

In the movie While You Were Sleeping, Peter has been in a coma, and when he wakes up his conversation with his godfather Saul shows us more about his character than anything he might do in that moment.

Saul sits him down and says, “I couldn’t love you any more if you were my own son. But the fact of the matter is, you’re . . . well, you’re a putz.”

For most of us, our immediate reaction to someone saying something like that would be, “Why? What did I do?”

But what does Peter say? He says, “Is there a point to this?”

That one little line shows that Peter is disrespectful, selfish, and self-involved. Not the kind of man we want our heroine Lucy to end up with. A little while later Peter is standing at the front of the hospital’s chapel, preparing to marry Lucy. Peter’s brother Jack, the best man, says, “You suck!”

Peter says, “I suck, or the outfit sucks?”

Jack: “It’s a toss-up.”

Here the concern from Peter is about his appearance. He’s focused on the way he looks, the clothes he wears, and the visual he projects. He’s not really a likeable man. And if we haven’t already, by this point, the viewer is praying Lucy won’t go through with the wedding.

By using dialogue carefully you can give your characters dimension in a similar way.

On the flip-side, silence is sometimes as powerful (or more so) than dialogue. What would make your character choose not to respond? If asked a direct question, would your character ever refuse to speak? In what circumstance? What does that say about him?

In Christmas Eve at Friday Harbor, author Lisa Kleypas introduces us to six-year-old Holly, who hasn’t spoken aloud since her mother’s death. Despite her uncle Mark’s best efforts, Holly refuses to speak. Her choice not to utter even a word tells us a lot about her character. She’s afraid of losing her parent again. She doesn’t easily trust adults or the world in general. And she doesn’t mind the quiet.

But when she slowly begins to communicate—adding items to the shopping list—her uncle counts it as a major victory. And when she speaks again, he full-on celebrates. Her first words are the indication that she feels safe, maybe for the first time since her mother’s passing. None of this has to do with what she said, but just that she said something.

As you’re creating characters with depth and goals, be sure to give them words that reveal their deeper character.

 


A Sparkle of Silver

Ninety years ago, Millie Sullivan’s great-grandmother was a guest at banker Howard Dawkins’ palatial estate on the shore of St. Simons Island, Georgia. Now, Millie plays a 1920s-era guest during tours of the same manor. But when her grandmother suggests that there is a lost diary containing the location of a hidden treasure on the estate, along with the true identity of Millie’s great-grandfather, Millie sets out to find the truth of her heritage–and the fortune that might be hers.

When security guard Ben Thornton discovers her snooping in the estate’s private library, he threatens to have her fired. But her story seems almost too ludicrous to be fiction, and her offer to split the treasure is too tempting to pass up . . .

By day Liz Johnson is a marketing manager. She makes time to write late at night—that’s when she thinks best anyway. Liz is the author of more than a dozen novels, a New York Times bestselling novella, and a handful of short stories. She’s a Christy Award finalist and a two-time ACFW Carol Award finalist. She makes her home in Phoenix, Arizona, where she enjoys exploring local music, theater, and doting on her nieces and nephews. She writes stories of true love filled with heart, humor, and happily ever afters.

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