Joyager2
Amateur
- Joined
- Jan 30, 2025
- Messages
- 80
- Points
- 33
Hey, folks. Here's the essence of my question: How do you write a community that feels real without having to develop a dozen separate characters?
In the story I'm working on now, my protagonists leave home and travel into the unknown to save their village. Choosing to leave is a big decision for them and, along the way, they'll have more than a few tough moments when they miss being at home and miss the people they've left behind. My issue is that I don't want this to feel grating to a reader. It's exhausting to read characters talking about other characters you've never met or crying over characters you haven't spent any real time with. If possible, I'd also like my readers to think to themselves, 'Man, I also miss that character. I hope the protagonists succeed in saving them.' But I know that it's also exhausting to spend large chunks of time reading about a dozen different characters, especially when none of them are present for the bulk of the story.
I suppose some of the answer might be two have each of my protagonists be endeared to one or two other characters across some of the early chapters before they leave home, but I'd prefer to spend the majority of that page-space developing the relationships between my actual protagonists, who we'll spend the rest of the novel with and whose relationships are far more central to the story.
I don't know. I'm at a bit of a loss on how to proceed. Does anyone have any advice?
In the story I'm working on now, my protagonists leave home and travel into the unknown to save their village. Choosing to leave is a big decision for them and, along the way, they'll have more than a few tough moments when they miss being at home and miss the people they've left behind. My issue is that I don't want this to feel grating to a reader. It's exhausting to read characters talking about other characters you've never met or crying over characters you haven't spent any real time with. If possible, I'd also like my readers to think to themselves, 'Man, I also miss that character. I hope the protagonists succeed in saving them.' But I know that it's also exhausting to spend large chunks of time reading about a dozen different characters, especially when none of them are present for the bulk of the story.
I suppose some of the answer might be two have each of my protagonists be endeared to one or two other characters across some of the early chapters before they leave home, but I'd prefer to spend the majority of that page-space developing the relationships between my actual protagonists, who we'll spend the rest of the novel with and whose relationships are far more central to the story.
I don't know. I'm at a bit of a loss on how to proceed. Does anyone have any advice?