When you develop characters, do you already know who they are before you begin writing, or do you let them develop as you go?
I have a basic idea of most of my characters. My main characters I will develop before I begin to write my story. I outline who they are in my story development, and for each character, I make notes on their emotional state in the story and what are triggers, their physical aspect such as body type, and the environment they grew around, whether it is religious, dysfunctional family, rich, poor. Some of the characters start as I imagined, but as the story evolves, the premise of their nature is the same but what may change is their state of mind.
Are your characters based on people you know?
A character might have some of my personality in him or her and live an experience I lived, but generally, my characters are not based on people I know. When I develop a character, depending on his or her role in the story, as I write them into the story, I will sometimes get a mental picture of how they are and look like because sometimes the character will remind me of a similar character I saw in a movie. Other characters I had to research their behaviour, their mental state in certain situations. For example, if a character is a drug addict or overdosed, what is their mental state? What do they resemble after detox? What do they go through in detox?
Do you write as routine, or do you write when you feel like it?
I usually write as a routine. When I start a book project, I give myself three to four months to finish my manuscript. I wrote the book I am working on in four months. I set myself a goal to write a minimum of three to five pages per night. Of course, things happen, and in that instance, you’re not meeting your goal for that day, but I write five nights a week typically, so I compensate and write those pages either during the day the following day or block some time on a Saturday or Sunday to write them. My routine is to write from Monday to Friday only, whether evenings or during the day if I’m not working. Once the manuscript is finished, I follow the same routine of editing the manuscript. I go through my manuscript at least three times, reviewing and editing before being satisfied with it.
Five or ten characters from the book/series (with a soundbite of what makes them interesting or important to the story).
Elliot: He is a young man like any young man his age who discovers that he is attracted to other guys. He goes through many of the things young homosexuals face, denial, acceptance, family strain and even becoming a possible victim of hate crime. As the main character of this story, he experiences dramatic ups and downs in search of himself.
Chad: He and Elliot grew up in the same town and have been friends since grade 1. He is Elliot’s picker-upper when he’s down, he is Elliot’s fantasy and a solid friend. Without Chad, who will have Elliot’s back.
Chase: He is a good Samaritan. You can say he’s a mama’s boy because his mother worries about him even when as an adult. Chase will do everything to please his parents. One day he meets Elliot, and his life is turned upside down.
Paul: His parents immigrated to Canada from Germany. He was born in Canada and raised by an authoritarian father and a submissive mother. Being raised in such an environment, he began bullying others at school and gathered mindlike followers. Paul is a torn in Elliot’s back, and every opportunity he gets to ostracize him, he seizes it. Paul frees himself from his father’s grip and surrounds himself with individuals who have just as many issues as he does.
Cody: Cody comes from a similar environment as Elliot. He is more comfortable with who he is than Elliot is. Cody is Elliot’s first boyfriend and lover, and with Cody, Elliot comes into his own and finally begins to be himself.
Will Elliott’s past dampen his new life?
Book Title: Stolen Heart
Author: Kristian Daniels
Publisher: FriesenPress
Cover Artist: FriesenPress
Genre/s: M/M Romance
Trope/s: Friends to lovers
Themes: Coming out, Forgiveness, Love, Hate crime
Length: 60 000 words/284 pages
It is a standalone book.
Buy Links
Amazon US | Amazon CA | Amazon UK
Blurb
Life is better with you.
As a teen, Elliott Denison grapples with life, love and sexuality. His heart had been shattered every time his parents pushed him away. Life had forced him to be strong enough to endure Stanstead’s biggest bully and strong enough to come into his own as an openly gay man.
Now he was 26 years old, and a wave of emotion invaded him as though a switch had been sparked in his mind when Chase Harrison unexpectedly crossed his path. Everything Elliott ever wanted growing up was there in front of him. It doesn’t take long for Elliott to enter into Chase’s life.
Then the ugly past rears its head. Only this time, the face is a shadowy online stalker and an anonymous hater.
Book Trailer
I got back home a few hours later. “Hi, I’m back,” I said. As I headed towards my room, my father asked me to join him in the living room. I did.
“What?”
My father was sitting in his chair with my mother by his side. Something didn’t look right.
“Are you a homosexual?” my father asked calmly but sternly as he turned my laptop around. I hadn’t even noticed it there.
My worst nightmare was staring at me. Ah, shit. “How come my laptop is down here?” I asked.
“I asked you a question,” my father said.
My eyes started darting around as if looking for a place to hide, but I finally looked at my father and answered, “I don’t know.”
“This is a sin!” my father yelled, slamming the laptop shut. He approached me, pointing his finger at me. “This behaviour stops now, you hear? I will not have a sinner in my house! We didn’t bring you up like this, and no son of mine will partake in such disgusting, perverted activities! If you don’t change, I will send you to conversion therapy.”
I looked at my mother for some support or compassion, but she stood there and did nothing. My father stormed outside and slammed the door behind him.
“Mom,” I said, “I’m sorry you had to find out this way.”
“You are a sinner,” she said, slapping me across the face. “You are a disgrace to this family. I would rather have a criminal for a son than a pervert. If you want to remain part of this family, you will cease this deviant behaviour immediately; otherwise, I want you out of this house.”
“Mom, please… Don’t say that. It’s not my fault. I tried to resist these feelings. Believe me, I tried.” My eyes were starting to tear up.
“You didn’t try hard enough,” she said.
“This is how God made me, Mom. I can’t change that.”
Her eyes became dark, and her pupils dilated, “Don’t you take the lord’s name in vain! Why do you insist on hurting us like this?”
“I don’t want to hurt you! Do you think this is to hurt you?”
“Liar!” Her face was so close to mine that I could smell her breath. Then she walked out.
I ran outside, slammed the door behind me, and sat on the front steps, trembling. I couldn’t stop sobbing. I called Chad and asked him if I could crash at his place.
“What happened?” Chad asked.
“My parents found out I was gay! They saw the video on my laptop. The things they said to me were so hurtful. I can’t live here anymore! All that matters to them is what the bible says! They’re ready to throw me out! I don’t mean anything to them!”
“Calm down,” Chad said. “I’ll come to pick you up. Pack your things.”
I went inside, grabbed all that would fit in my duffle bag, and stormed back outside to wait for Chad. I didn’t bother telling my parents where I was going; they wouldn’t care anyway. Chad drove up the driveway, I got in, and we left.
“What did you tell your parents?”
“I told them what you told me,” Chad said.
“Are they cool with me coming over?”
“Yes, they’re fine with it. How are you holding up?”
“I’m not sure. I don’t know what to think. I feel so ashamed.”
“Don’t. It’s not your fault.” As we pulled up the driveway to his house, Chad suggested that I see a school counsellor next week. “Maybe they can help.”
“Yeah, maybe. Thanks for everything,” I said.
As we walked in, Chad’s parents met us at the door. His mom said, “Hi, Elliott, welcome. I want you to feel comfortable here. Consider this your home now. Chad told us a bit of what happened, and we’re so sorry you had to live that.”
“Thank you, Mrs. Hardwicke.
“Come, I’ll show you your room,” Chad said as we walked up the stairs. “Rest up. If you need anything, I’m just across the hall. It will be alright, I promise.” Chad hugged me and went back downstairs.
I sat on the bed, hunched over with my head in my hands, rocking. “What am I suppose to do now? Am I such a bad person?”
Kristian Daniels writes coming of age, gay romance and gay love stories. His stories are about the life and tribulations of the LGBTQs community, their fight to be accepted and loved. It’s also about their struggles, rejection and their suffering. Writing a novel was always a thirst for him, and with Stolen Heart, it became a reality.
Author Links
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