Mandy Botlik
asked
Zoë Marriott:
How do you go about writing characters that are strong and also damaged, like frost and Suzume?
Zoë Marriott
Excellent question! I think the key is to see characters as whole people, just like yourself and the other people in your life.
We all - everyone of us, even the ones that seem totally perfect, confident and together on the surface - have damage of our own that makes us feel weak and flawed and hurt somewhere deep inside. But we all also have strengths and wonderful, powerful, worthwhile things about us, too. Vulnerable and strong may seem to be opposites, but actually it's the way they exist together within someone's personality that makes them who they are. Characters have to be the same. That often means reaching down into yourself as a writer and putting some analogue of your own pain and weakness on the page, and it's difficult - writing about Suzume was especially hard for me - but ultimately really rewarding because you feel as if you've reflected reality and created something really truthful in your fiction.
The good thing about writing YA is that often you're able to show a young person just beginning to grow all their strengths and their passions around the places inside them that are vulnerable and flawed, learning how to be who they need to be to survive and thrive. Sometimes you see this right from the start, as with Suzume and the events at the beginning of Shadows on the Moon, which she spends the whole book learning cope with. Sometimes, as with Frost in FrostFire, you portray a person desperately struggling and then go back and show the reader what has left them this way before you begin to build them back up again.
Tl;dr: strong and damaged are two sides of the same coin, and every character should have some of each inside them.
We all - everyone of us, even the ones that seem totally perfect, confident and together on the surface - have damage of our own that makes us feel weak and flawed and hurt somewhere deep inside. But we all also have strengths and wonderful, powerful, worthwhile things about us, too. Vulnerable and strong may seem to be opposites, but actually it's the way they exist together within someone's personality that makes them who they are. Characters have to be the same. That often means reaching down into yourself as a writer and putting some analogue of your own pain and weakness on the page, and it's difficult - writing about Suzume was especially hard for me - but ultimately really rewarding because you feel as if you've reflected reality and created something really truthful in your fiction.
The good thing about writing YA is that often you're able to show a young person just beginning to grow all their strengths and their passions around the places inside them that are vulnerable and flawed, learning how to be who they need to be to survive and thrive. Sometimes you see this right from the start, as with Suzume and the events at the beginning of Shadows on the Moon, which she spends the whole book learning cope with. Sometimes, as with Frost in FrostFire, you portray a person desperately struggling and then go back and show the reader what has left them this way before you begin to build them back up again.
Tl;dr: strong and damaged are two sides of the same coin, and every character should have some of each inside them.
More Answered Questions
A Goodreads user
asked
Zoë Marriott:
I have just started reading shadows of the moon and barefoot on the wind. It's the first series in a long time that I have read in a night. Are you planning on writing any more in the series. Would there be a little mermaid inspired novel set in the Moonlit Lands?
Ruby Black
asked
Zoë Marriott:
I absolutely love love your books! Such beautiful settings and strong characters! It can be hard to find characters that stay with you after you close the book, so in literally rolling on sunshine. Thank you! Q: In 'The night itself', how did the server at the cafe see shinobo? Was she previously touched by magical beings? Or was it because he was worn from fighting and some kind of magical force field slipped?
fff
asked
Zoë Marriott:
Hi! I've reread FROSTFIRE many times and unlike other books, the plot and characters still are fresh. I'm wondering: what difficulties did you encounter in writing that awesome book, what was your inspiration for Frost, and how did you come up with the absolutely beautiful songs ('The falling night has cast your eyes...) peppered throughout the book?
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