CRAFTING CHARACTERS THROUGH SETTING DETAILS

Looking for Clues

Writers are natural snoops, observers on the lookout for clues, closely examining the world around them to figure out how people work and uncovering their secrets. We can’t count on people to tell the truth about themselves, but we can discover what they’re leaving out by closely observing their surroundings.

The same goes for our characters. 

We can get our characters talking in dialogue, but they won’t give much away. What others say about them can give us more clues – so many different opinions. But really, all people, and characters, reveal their true selves by what they DO. That’s why charACTers must ACT! They can say one thing and do another, what they do is the truth.

But first, let’s find out as much as we can about our story people by examining their surroundings and possessions.

Specific Telling Details

When visiting someone’s home for the first time, or the thirtieth, we writerly types aren’t just settling into the couch but searching the room for telling details that give us insight into who our friend really is. 

Pictures of family stuck to the fridge? Faded pixie photos of children in school uniforms with outdated hairstyles? Wall calendars stacked on top of each other hanging from the nail on the wall. Fresh flowers from the garden, or dusty plastic bouquets forgotten on top of cabinets. Carpet or polished floors? Kitchen benches scattered with leftovers from preparing the last meal, butter melting in its container; or pristine benches smelling of bleach?

Every clue gives us vital information about our new friend, or how our old friend is coping. Those photos on the fridge are from a decade earlier, the first calendar on that piled upon hook date from the year their marriage fell apart. As you can see, details of a person’s living space provide us with lots of information. Don’t neglect these details in your writing.

Uncover Secrets

What’s your character’s lounge room like? What about the kitchen? Their bedroom? 

And just wait till you look inside their fridge, or even better, the bathroom cabinet. Is it stacked with pregnancy tests or haemorrhoid ointments? Herbal toothpaste and castor oil or expensive, chemical-laden beauty products? And what about music choices? AC/DC or Mozart? Disco or Jazz? Art on the walls? Abstract originals or Kmart prints of tigers? Fluffy toys on a grown man’s bed? Star Wars pillowcases on an older woman’s? A jungle of plants covering the kitchen table? A hallway narrowed to a pathway through mounds of stacked boxes and files?

A person’s character is shaped by their environment – the country we grow up in, the culture and religion we are born into, the weather and geography.  When you are developing your characters, think about where they come from, where they live and those small telling details you’d find in their home, handbag or pockets. We don’t need pages of description, but you can slide in important clues in half a sentence or two. 

“Fran opened the fridge to find all the organic vegetables she’d bought on Monday. They exhausted her.” Or “Bob stuck his hand into his pocket finding only the lucky rock he’d found as a kid and had carried ever since, and a crusty hanky he really needed to wash.”

I’m already thinking about that lucky rock and where Bob found it and why that rock, found on that faraway day, was so important. I know he’s not going to wash the hanky

TRY THIS

What is in your character’s pockets?

What’s in their fridge?

Go snooping in their bathroom, what clues can you find that give you insight into the past that shaped them and the person they’re dreaming of becoming?

We are, all of us, reaching for the future but dwelling on the past. What does your character really want? And what pain from the past is preventing them achieving it? Where do their thoughts get stuck in a loop? What’s their greatest dream?

Uncover your character’s hidden depths

Use your writing supersleuth powers to dig deep into the heart of every character that plays a major role in your story. Some people like to fill in imaginary questionnaires. 

But I don’t do that with new friends, I check out what they’re wearing. I snoop around their homes, grab a drink from their fridge. I clock similarities to myself and those interesting differences. Most of all I search for clues to their past and what’s shaped them.

Go snooping in your character’s lives and freewrite about what you find. Only snippets may find their way into your story, but you may just stumble upon what really makes them tick.

That new friend may have frozen rats in the freezer, photos of two concurrent love interests on the fridge and heavy-duty tranquilizers in the cabinet (and you’d always thought they were just so naturally calm!).

Use all these setting elements to develop your character and make them more than just a stereotype. Create interesting, fully-rounded characters, shaped by their pasts, grasping for a dream, and reflected by their surroundings.

If you’d like to learn more about CHARACTER DEVELOPMENT I’m running a FREE CREATING CHARACTERS WORKSHOP at Elanor Library on the Gold Coast on Saturday February 1, 2025. Did I say FREE? Book in HERE.

And if you’d like to explore the myriad ways you can add depth, meaning, emotional undercurrents and so much more to your writing through setting details, then join me at the Queensland Writers Centre in South Brisbane on Sunday March 9 for a full day masterclass on SETTING – MORE THAN JUST THE SCENERY. Book in HERE

Give some of these exercises a go and discover what really makes your characters tick!

Let me know how you go! Come along to one of the workshops! I’d love to see your smiling face.

Lots of love

Edwina 🙂 xx

5 FUN UPLIFTING ACTIVITIES FOR LOCKDOWN!

Here in Queensland we’ve been pretty lucky lockdown wise. But now, here we are, as the rest of the world parties again, finding ourselves shut in. This whole Covid business has dragged on so long. We’re all sick and tired of the whole thing. But we’re stuck inside, some of us with no one to play with. What to do?

Here are a few fun creative activities to help fill those hours – there’s only so much screen time you can take before you start getting crazy eyes.

  1. A MOMENT OF JOY! We’ve all had moments of pure happiness. This picture represents one of mine – a wonderful trip out to Moreton Island with my extended family, including my young nieces and nephew. We climbed all the way to the top of enormous sand dunes and slid and bumped and jumped and rolled our way back down again. Such fun. Remember your moment of joy, big or small, the birth of a child, a win at work or in a sport you love, the first time you clapped eyes on a true love, that moment of connection with a small creature, the delight of rain on your face at the end of a stinking hot day. If you can’t think of anything, make something up! We’d all like to win a lottery, right? Now put a timer on for 5 minutes and write about that moment covering all the five senses – sight, sound, taste, smell and touch. Go deeper. What did that joy feel like in your body? You can do this as a poem, a list, a song, an essay, a story, a drawing even. Whatever you like. Whatever takes you back to that moment and helps you feel that joy again. When the timer goes off, you can stop if you like. But if you’re on a roll just keep going!

2. MOVE! Okay, okay we’re stuck at home and there’s not much room maybe, but if you’ve got room to stand you’ve got room to stretch right up and try to touch the ceiling! Then bend down as low as you can – bend your knees. Then see how far you can twist around. Put on music and do a jig. Roll around on the floor like a log. Have fun moving your body. Even just wriggling is lots of fun and good exercise too. I love to do a shimmy to wake myself up and shake my sillies out. If no one is watching, play some kids’ music and dance along. If you’ve got people at home you can all work out a dance routine – just for fun. It doesn’t have to end up on TikTok.

3. MAKE A CONSTRUCTION If you’re like me you may collect things, shells, feathers, odd toys or leaves or plastic toys. Gather a few of them together and see if you can make something from them, just a photo still life will do, or you could draw them or paint them or stick them all together with glue. Or write about one of them, where you found it, what it reminds you of, why you picked it up. Just handling those collected treasures will lift your spirits.

4. MAKE A COLLAGE! All you need is an old magazine or two, some scissors (or just rip pictures out) and glue and a piece piece of paper of cardboard – an old cereal box will do. Set a timer for 10 minutes and flick through the magazines or newspaper or old books that you don’t mind cutting up or whatever you have, looking for any images that appeal to you. Anything that makes you smile. Words too. Anything that draws you in, or “speaks” to you in some way. Don’t overthink it and don’t get stuck reading articles, just keep flicking and ripping out pictures of things that make your heart sing. When the timer goes off stick all the images onto your sheet of paper or cardboard, go outside the edges, do lift up flaps, do both sides, whatever you like! You could cover a shoebox to keep precious things in. Just have fun doing it. Use coloured pencils or felt pens or glittery stickers or stars to decorate it. When you’re done, pin it on your wall to remind you of all the things that make you smile.

5. WRITE A LIST! Not a shopping list. Not a list of pros and cons. This time write a list of all the small things that bring you joy. Roses or rain, or swimming in a waterfall, or walking along the beach, or hugging your kids, or playing with your dog, or red-backed wrens, or small stones gleaming under a stream, or a blue blue sky, or a friend’s laugh or grandma’s chocolate pudding or your favourite song. Try and get to fifty! Yes fifty! Fifty small things that bring you joy.

Last but not least, even if you can’t go outside, stick your head out the window and look up at the sky. Watch the clouds for a while, until your neck gets sore anyway.

The world is still a beautiful, magical place and it is good to be alive.

Try one of these activities or all of them. I hope they’ll lift your spirits.

With lots of love

Edwina xxx