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Unforgettable Characters!
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Lilian
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Oct 29, 2013 12:33PM

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Holden Caulfield, the amazing, scatterbrained narrator in J.D. Salinger's classic, "The Catcher in the Rye", revealed that teenagers in 1945 were not much different than those living today.
I remember thinking, while trying to follow Holden's rambling, often illogical narration, that this kid was even more screwed up than I was at his age and that is saying something.

A factotum, a man Friday, a travelling companion and a man that knows everything about Arabia. He calls himself, Haji Halef Omar ben Hadji ibn Abdaul Abbas al Gossara...

He was the servant/companion of the main character in Karl May's novel about a would-be pilgrim who never actually made the pilgrimage to Mecca.

Excellent, Karl May wrote 53 books, these books you would call at todays standards, YA books. He was a liar and a cheat, his books sold over twenty million and still sold after his death. Adventures concocted while in prison. Thanks for knowing Jim.

or is it the beginning of 'Oldtimers'? We remember the day we are borne, but damn it where are my keys?

That was my first big read and I, too , have never forgotten it. Good call :-)


"He was the ugliest man in the bar, and he had his eye on her."
Of course, by the end of the book our heroine had a different perspective. Somehow he was not ugly anymore, but had become exiting and rugged.








"My mother was not shy about telling me the truth about the birds and the bees, but she sighed more than once over my reticence to discuss sex with her. It wasn’t that I did not know the basics, I just didn’t want to think about such things at that time, so I was not happy when I discovered that my parents were sending me to a newly organized camp that would teach me the importance of abstinence while also instructing me how to use birth control devices like condoms, pills, patches, and intrauterine devices. I had no problem with abstinence, and I was not interested in learning how to roll a condom onto a penis."



It's also often seen when men write from a woman's point of view and vice versa. Usually every time I read a book written by a man from a woman's point of view I'm rolling my eyes because I can easily see he's suffering from lack of experience. Some men have done it successfully, but most don't.
At the moment I am writing a novel where the main protagonist is studying social work. I've never studies that, but have a few friends who have and they are helping me. However, it is difficult when crafting this girl's character because, not knowing the intimate details about it, I can't be sure I'm making it affect her character correctly because I've never experienced it myself.
So while not impossible to write about something you don't know, it is more difficult than writing about something you have experienced and runs the risk of being less authoritative.


There are pros and cons in every situation, I guess, and every writer's different, but most sites with writing tips will usually include writing about what you know as one of the first tips. In the writing seminars I conduct it's the first point I raise, although I make it clear that doesn't mean that a person can't write outside the realm of his or her experience, just that it's helpful to do that in at least one aspect when it comes to plot or characterisation.

Memorable characters for me include Molly Grue from "The Last Unicorn," Miss Scarlett O'Hara from "Gone With the Wind," Mr. Rhett Butler from "Gone With the Wind," and Aminata Diallo from "Someone Knows My Name."

My most memorable character is Lynda Coldridge in Doris Lessing's The Four Gated City.

I'm currently reading Goe with the Wind with a couple hundred pages to go. I have to aree that Miss Scarlett is indeed memorable!