Me: All right then, Vey, why don't you tell me a little about yourself?
Vey: (Stares blankly at me from across the table)
Me: Erm... (nervous paper shuffling) Why don't you tell me a little about your childhood? What made you the man you are today?
Vey: (Frowning) You do know you're talking to yourself, right?
Me: Well, ah, technically yes, but this is supposed to be an int-
Vey: I mean, let's be honest. I'm not even from your reality; why would I be sitting at a table with you?
Me: You're missing the point. I'm trying to get to know you better. I'm making the effort to figure out what makes you a unique individual. And no one can hear us, anyway.
Vey: Oh, all right. (Clears throat, then begins to speak in a stiff, artificial manner) I had a very difficult childhood. We were trained to-- Look, I'm sorry, this just isn't working for me. This isn't how I operate.
Me: Well, if you want to get real about, it, you don't normally speak like you're speaking now, either.
Vey: If you're gonna be a smartass, I can take my toys and go home.
When I write, when I think about my characters, I live in their skin. My outer body stills, and my mind turns to what they're seeing and feeling. It's difficult to do--and probably why I'm slow, since you can't do this when you're mind is buzzing with too much real-life responsibility. But writing through the character's skin gives them such life, such vibrance, that for a few moments I can forgive my pokiness and just enjoy the ride.
5 comments:
The "interview" was hilarious. Loved it.
Thanks :) I'm starting to suspect that this technique might work best for writers of contemporary fiction-- which I will probably never write, since I have enough real life in real life.
I agree with you, Roz..."interviewing" one's main character is like interviewing oneself--doesn't work for me. I have to be inside the character--that is, become the character.
And that's why I "heart" Vey. He doesn't have time for the touchy-feely stuff. Just let him do his job.
Love your attempt at an interview. :)
Very nice interview. I guess you would call that a hostile character. I liked the way the reader learns about the character indirectly.
Usually when I want to get into a character, the role usually takes me- accessing a part of me that was always made out of that piece of fiction.
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