>Mistake Number 7

> Don’t Use Real People in Your Story. Fair enough. Real people are boring: “Good characters have to be constructed, not copied from actuality.” Here Bickham is telling us that the characters we build need to be larger than life in order to be vivid on the page. And “Good fiction characters also tend to be more understandable than real-life people. They do the things they do for motives that make more sense than real-life motives often do.” The reader doesn’t have to agree with those motives, but they have to be clear. “To put this point another way, in real life people often don’t make sense. But in fiction, they do.”

#7 Don’t Use Real People in Your Story

About the author

I am the author of three novels--THE LAST BIRD OF PARADISE, OLIVER'S TRAVELS, and THE SHAMAN OF TURTLE VALLEY--and three story collections--IN AN UNCHARTED COUNTRY, HOUSE OF THE ANCIENTS AND OTHER STORIES, and WHAT THE ZHANG BOYS KNOW, winner of the Library of Virginia Literary Award for Fiction. I am also the co-founder and former editor of Prime Number Magazine and the editor of the award-winning anthology series EVERYWHERE STORIES: SHORT FICTION FROM A SMALL PLANET.

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