All writers have a different style – some are plotters, some write by
the seats of their pants, some work with a combo of the above or their
very own construct. It doesn’t matter how the author creates, but what the author creates – and what the writer creates is a story filled with characters we root for and against.
There
is a great deal of information available about heroes – alpha or beta,
romantic or hard-boiled. Is he tall, athletic and handsome, or do the
ladies adore his geekiness?
Our favorite heroines are
generally smart, funny, and accomplished. But then again, there are the
Stephanie Plums of the world, too! She’s smart, she’s funny, she’s
klutzy!
But villains – where do the villains come
from? Are they archetypes, constructs from our days of hearing fairy
tales and myths? Are they the product of nightmares or do we pick our
boss’ least appealing characteristics and make them bigger than life? Do
we build him or her from people we read or hear about in the news? In
documentaries? Or are they only a product of the writer's fertile
imagination?
As far back as man has created, the
villain has been a crucial component of the storyteller’s craft. The
villain – or villainess, as the case may be – creates a great deal of
stress and angst for our lovely hero and heroine. The villain will
thwart them at every turn for a while, and then their brilliance,
bravery and moxie will shine as the villain is conquered.
What was our bad guy’s fatal flaw – hubris, stupidity, inexperience? Whatever it is, it brings him down in the end.
And isn’t that what we all want – to see justice done, the villain stopped and our hero or heroine win the day?
Who is your favorite fictional villain and why?
Libby
Libby McKinmer
www.libbymckinmer.com
Romance with an edge
Find me on Facebook, Twitter & Goodreads
Monday, November 23, 2015
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