NotaNuffian
This does spark joy.
- Joined
- Nov 26, 2019
- Messages
- 5,283
- Points
- 233
I have been there before; read about a chill old druid self sacrificing himself for his party and suddenly, backstory time.
For just chunky three paragraphs, his entire sad story got vomitted out and while I still feel emotional for the character, the backstory thing is still jarring.
Then in the other work, I read a character that I did not care about but the author insisted I should. Why? Four bloody chapters kept on flashing his "sad" story and then tens of chapters later, dude died. I recalled my emotion was "that was a waste of my time".
Authors, how do you gauge *wibbly wobbly backstory hoki poki* amount versus spending words on them?
For just chunky three paragraphs, his entire sad story got vomitted out and while I still feel emotional for the character, the backstory thing is still jarring.
Then in the other work, I read a character that I did not care about but the author insisted I should. Why? Four bloody chapters kept on flashing his "sad" story and then tens of chapters later, dude died. I recalled my emotion was "that was a waste of my time".
Authors, how do you gauge *wibbly wobbly backstory hoki poki* amount versus spending words on them?