|
To celebrate the launch of Writing in the Dark, we welcome Tim Waggoner to Ginger Nuts of Horror with an excellent feature looking at how to tackle the issue of pain in writing. Writing in the Dark is a comprehensive textbook devoted to the craft of writing horror fiction, award-winning author Tim Waggoner draws on thirty years’ experience as a writer and teacher. Writing in the Dark offers advice, guidance, and insights on how to compose horror stories and novels that are original, frightening, entertaining, and well-written In horror, characters are often under the threat of physical violence, injury, and ultimately death. But the mental, emotional, and spiritual wounds characters suffer can be far worse than physical pain. Make sure that death isn’t the worst thing that can happen to your characters – not by a long shot. 1) ALL STORIES ARE ABOUT CHARACTERS EXPERIENCING PAIN All stories are about people who are suffering and what they do to alleviate that suffering. How characters attempt to deal with pain and how those attempts change them is the core plot of every story, but perhaps especially in horror. Pain happens inside a character, and what’s painful for one might not be painful for another, at least not in the same way. After all, the word horror clearly indicates emotional pain. It’s the only genre whose name itself focuses on pain. Yet I’ve seen many horror stories from students in which the characters aren’t emotionally impacted by the story events. They might experience physical pain, but that’s it. These writers only told part of a story – and the least interesting part at that. They didn’t tell the story of their characters’ overall pain. Let’s talk about how to effectively combine the four different types of pain in your fiction. 2) PHYSICAL PAINLearn what happens to the human body when it gets injured. Find out what your characters can and can’t do after they’re wounded. Research how much a specific injury would hurt, whether a character would be able to continue to function with that level of pain, and what the longer-term effects of an injury are. Will your character eventually pass out? Die from internal bleeding? Need surgery to survive? How much an injury affects your characters depends on their personalities – their psychological makeup. How does a particular character react to getting injured, and how does the severity of the injury change their reaction? How does a character react to witnessing others getting injured or killed? Figuring out all these things will help you depict physical pain and injuries in your fiction effectively and convincingly. 3) EMOTIONAL PAINFear is only one type of emotional pain. Loss, grief, despair, sorrow, anxiety, shame, rage, resentment, guilt, surprise (as in a shocking surprise, not a happy, welcome one), confusion, disgust, hatred . . . Your characters might experience any or all of these emotions in your horror story along with fear. The more impactful the event – and the more of a monstrous distortion of reality it is – the stronger the characters’ emotional reactions will be. One of the best ways to make the unreal feel real in your stories is to present realistic emotional reactions to it on the part of your characters. 4) MENTAL PAINMental pain is an intellectual realization that provokes an emotional reaction. A character becomes aware that he or she must die to save others. Superman’s father Jor-El discovers that Krypton is doomed, but he can’t get anyone to believe him. Some of your characters might be more prone to this type of pain than others. Someone who has strong, immediate emotional reactions to events might not be as thoughtful or introspective enough to think through the steps to reach a conclusion that leads to mental pain. They may be too focused on themselves and the immediate threat they’re dealing with to have the luxury of taking time to think. Or they may be so intellectually focused that they have difficulty with allowing themselves to have emotional reactions. As with everything else in fiction, it all depends on the particular character. 5) SPIRITUAL PAIN |
Archives
April 2023
|


RSS Feed