Every writer ends up writing about someone who isn’t exactly like them sooner or later – and it’s nearly always sooner, given the number of characters in the average novel. The minor characters, walk-ons, and even the important secondary characters can usually be fudged, but the main viewpoint character is another story.

As a slight aside, this is one of the main reasons why beginning writers are so often urged NOT to write in first person: because many find it extra-difficult to get into someone else’s head when they’re writing “I” and for so many years “I” has meant them, the author, and not some totally different character. More on this in a minute.

Characters can be unlike their authors in a whole variety of ways, from relatively minor aspects of physical appearance (height, hair length, eye color), to their personality, to the moral and political views they hold, to more substantial things like race, ethnicity, age, gender, sexual orientation, cultural background, etc. And the first step toward writing somebody different is to notice that they are.

This may sound obvious, but it always surprises me how often people attribute their own life experience to characters without thinking. I ran across a twenty-something writer whose sixty-ish hero made a comment that as a teenager, he’d gotten an eyebrow piercing to freak out his parents. I could only shake my head. Any guy who grew up in 1960s suburbia did not get an eyebrow piercing or a tattoo; if he wanted to rebel, all he did was grow his hair to chin length. Shoulder length or longer, if he really wanted to freak out the grownups.

Even the little things like height and hair length affect your character’s actions. The greater the differences between the writer and the character, the more aware the writer has to be of how the differences affect everything else in the character’s life. Really big differences (like race or a significant difference in age or ability) often require research, even if the writer is working in a completely imaginary world with a made-up history and culture.

What with all those problems, it almost seems as if it would be easier for authors to write about people who are exactly like themselves. Unfortunately, most of us find it far more interesting to write about folks who are different from us (and besides, most of the authors I know have fairly ordinary lives, no matter what all those intriguing author bios say, which means that writing about somebody different makes for a much more interesting story).

So how do you write about somebody different?

It starts by thinking about him/her, and noticing the differences. All the differences, not just the large ones, because not only do all of the differences make a difference, they all interact and affect one another. A 6’7” teenaged boy is probably going to attract interest from the school basketball coach, whether he’s into sports or not; a 6’7” senior citizen is not (though basketball may have been his sport when he was young).

Then you think hard about all the ways in which those differences, and the interaction of those differences, might affect that character’s life experiences and about how they would react to both their past experiences and to the ones they’re going to have in your story. Not how you would react, because for you, suddenly being a different height, age, sex, race, etc. would be a change. For your character, it’s how things are in their life, and the difference that makes in their life experience ripples through everything else. 

From the character’s goals, motivations, and aspirations, to their reactions to other characters, to their speech patterns, anything can be different from your personal baseline, and all of those will be affected by their life experiences, which in turn will be affected by their physical, mental, and personality differences from the writer, so all of it has to be at least looked at and decided about. Even small things make for differences in behavior. The character who’s shorter than I am will have a step-stool handy for getting to the top shelf and use it without thinking; the one who’s a lot taller than me will see things on the top shelf and reach them easily, but might miss important clues that are lower down, and may have trouble banging into low doorways, slanted ceilings, etc.

It’s also important, especially with secondary and minor characters, to think at least briefly about your own reaction to them, where and how that reaction relies on stereotypes, and how you can change things up. Perhaps your first impulse is to make that minor bartender character a middle-aged, beer-bellied, balding dispenser of wise advice; if you stop to think about it, you can instead make the bartender a young woman working her way through college or a middle-aged character actor doing research for a part. It can help to remember that everyone has his or her own story…or it can be a distraction, depending on the writer.

Integrating all this into actually writing the character is another matter. For me, writing characters is a kind of cross between method acting and playing “let’s pretend” from when I was five. There’s always a little part of my brain that’s trying to pretend to be the character, warts and all. There’s another, more analytical part that’s always checking the character’s actions and dialog and reminding myself “This isn’t me here, is it? This is Jennie, or George, or Herman.” It can feel more than a little odd because in some scenes I have to stop every couple of lines to check on a different character’s actions/reactions. And then I do it all again during the revisions.

Some writers find it easiest to learn how to write different characters by writing someone who is very different from themselves right off the bat, because it’s easier for them to spot the places where they get off track. The big difference between them and the character makes it obvious when they slip and start writing their own reactions and opinions, rather than the character’s. For other writers, it’s easier to keep their characters consistent if they start with something closer to autobiographical and work up to the seriously-different characters in small steps. Some writers have to lay everything out in advance; others immerse themselves in research and reading and then wing it.

The exact process by which you get into your characters’ heads isn’t terribly important; as usual, every writer does it a bit differently, and whatever works for you is what you should do (though be aware that it may take a few tries to figure out what that is).

6 Comments
  1. Ha! This goes for relationships too. My husband has to be reminded regularly that his extra 10 inches of height doesn’t just change how easily he can reach things on the top shelf, it changes the sorts and amounts of leverage he can exert on objects, plus how he actually sees things. Me, I get a very good look at the underside of most people’s noses, while he looks straight at them or even down on them.

    Every once in a while, I climb up on a stool to talk to him, just to see what it’s like to look someone directly in the eye during a conversation, instead of always having to crane my neck. He’s long since given up commenting on it. 😛 But what startled me about the experiment was how different I felt when I was ‘taller’. There was a whole other aspect of my personality that came out, simply because I’d now taken my place, albeit temporarily, with a more priveledged group. And I find that priveledge is what it comes down to, whether we recognize it or not. If you can figure out the priveledge of your character, you already know a lot about who they are and how they interact with others.

    As usual, fantastic post. Thank you!

  2. I’ve actually found that writing in 1st person helps me get into the mind of the character more. I might not keep it that way, but at first, it definitely helps me figure out their motives and voice.

  3. Reading primary source helps. Lots of primary source from all sorts of eras and locations.

    It’s not so much the particular information that you learn as the way it knocks your block off.

  4. This is definitely a good thing to keep in mind. In the first draft of my WIP I gave my heroine a certain reaction that was approximately what I would have done in the same situation, but now that I’ve gotten to know her better, I’ve realized that she would not, in fact, react like that.

  5. Handedness is an interesting one. I am left-handed.

    I remember helping my dad with a bit of shop work. He had a pipe in a vise. He was cutting off a piece. I was holding onto the pipe. He loosened the vise a bit and told me to turn the pipe. He had not specified which direction, and I turned the pipe in the direction natural for me. He scolded me for turning it the “wrong” way.

    I put my clothes on hangers the opposite way.

    My computer mouse is right-handed. This is an advantage for us lefties. I can scroll through a Web page and take notes. How do you right-handers manage?

  6. Gene: I put my mouse on the left. 🙂 It drives IT crazy whenever they have to actually put hands on my computer, but I can mouse and ten-key without moving my hands. I do a mean spreadsheet!