Into the Fire

Passionate thoughts about the world of writing and the Power of God

       Book-lovers-understand

I suppose the love we have for our favorite fictional characters originates in the love we have for certain people characteristics and personalities, their talents, and what we admire and/or respect. We cannot ignore their physical attributes or their sex appeal if established. Nor can we eliminate the genre factor. 

My friend and author Brenda S. Anderson unlike me will read a variety of genres, doesn't prefer the romance genre, although she's written some good ones, but instead enjoys reading and writing "women's fiction" – which she knows is not my favorite. Because of her preferences, I think it's safe to say certain romances probably won't produce those characters she might consider her favorites.

The truth is I love romance, but I don't read a lot of the romance genre because so much of it fails to provide me with the characters and situations I find enticing – which is really why I write them. I think some of the formulaic conflict in the romance content is overdone and consequently feels unreal. Which brings me back to The Masterpiece by Francine Rivers and two of my new favorite characters . . . 

Roman Velasco: I love him. Yes, he can be a Type A jerk, but mostly because he has that self-preservation and fear of love thing goin' on big time due to a tragic childhood filled with sorrow, loss, and inner rage. Talented artist, bad boy beautiful, brilliant mind, cynical to the max, and seeking more than the riches he's acquired with his art and loose lifestyle. He hires a "good girl" to be his personal assistant and can't understand why he's enthralled with her – especially after realizing she loves Jesus. That vulnerable streak is barely there, but it surfaces more than he wants to admit. He's a sensuous character who commands each scene without trying to.

Grace Moore: I love her. She wants so desperately to avoid making another mistake, filled with guilt from her marriage and subsequent divorce and the way she became a single mother in spite of treasuring her precious little boy. Roman has no idea she's had a tragic event and hard childhood and after her bad and hurtful marriage also has self-preservation issues. She knows Roman would be bad for her, but every time he really looks at her, she can't deny what she feels. She wants stability, he provides emotional chaos. She's vulnerable but strong in the Lord and well aware of what could happen to her if she succumbs to her attraction to him. I could relate to her fear and guilt and her being drawn to that bad boy artist.

So what is it that makes a character one of your favorites?  

 

Father, thank you for allowing us to experience a taste of creativity. Thank you for those who honor you with their gifts and talents. We're all desperate for you whether we know it or not. In the Name of Jesus, Amen.

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3 responses to “More about why we love our fictional characters . . .”

  1. Debra Avatar
    Debra

    Patrick Bowers: He struggles with needing to be at work and needing to pay attention to his step daughter.
    Raleigh Harmon: Her situation with her mom just breaks my heart. She remains dedicated to mother’s care even though she has no memory of her mother caring for her.
    I’m always impressed when a writer can portray the emotions of a character so realistically. Bodie Thoene is good at this too. I actually began to pray for the characters in one of her books one morning before I remembered they weren’t real! And in your book Sweet Release, I kept forgetting the characters were fictional.

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  2. Brenda S. Anderson Avatar

    Well described, Nicole!
    I think I’m drawn to characters with intelligence who you can also connect with on an emotional level. Mitch Rapp, Patrick Bowers being two of them.
    I dislike heroines who continuously put themselves in danger. I read a book recently that I really liked except toward the end the heroine kept making stupid choices and when she was kidnapped, “Serves you right” flitted through my mind. πŸ˜‰ Those actions really spoiled the story for me because she didn’t act intelligently. (And I know that all characters make stupid choices, that’s part of what gives them depth, but when the same stupid decisions are made over and over, that doesn’t reflect well on the character.)

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  3. Nicole Petrino-Salter Avatar

    Deb and Bren, Patrick Bowers is a great character that drives me nuts at times. He can be so clueless about God, not particularly adept at romance, both a good and not-so-good step-father mostly because emotional heartfelt displays aren’t easy for him and discussing anything in depth other than the job is a major trial for him. Steven James has done a great job capturing his social awkwardness while making his passionate pursuit of killers almost death-wish driven – making some of those “stupid choices” and killer risks at times and suffering the consequences.
    There’s just no comparison to Mitch Rapp – THE best character in a series ever.
    Deb, you’re so wonderfully affirming. Thank you beyond words.
    Stupid choices get to me too, Bren, especially when they’re made by female characters because it just seems clichΓ©. I don’t like female characters who compete with men but rather respect them or work with them to attempt to expose the bad ones and perhaps take them down if they can and don’t gloat about their abilities. I do like strong female characters and struggle with girly girls who pout when they break a nail. Humility goes a long way for me in a character male or female.

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