Sign up for Christina’s Newsletter

Christina Baker Kline

Author Website

  • Books
    • Please Don’t Lie
    • The Foursome
    • The Exiles
    • A Piece of the World
    • Orphan Train
      • Orphan Train Girl: The Young Readers’ Edition of Orphan Train
    • Other Novels
      • Bird in Hand
      • The Way Life Should Be
      • Desire Lines
      • Sweet Water
    • Nonfiction
      • Always Too Soon
      • About Face
      • Child of Mine
      • Room to Grow
      • The Conversation Begins
  • Events
  • NEWS
  • Other Writing
  • About
    • Bio
    • FAQs
    • Contact
    • Photos
  • Newsletter

July 1, 2009 By bakerkline

More Monkey Business

A writer friend, Cindy Handler, asks: “A few posts back [Writing Tip #3: Use a Monkeywrench] you mentioned that you like to give your characters a trait that goes counter to their basic nature and makes it harder for them to get what they want (if I understand correctly).  Could you give an example?  The main character in my novel is so controlling that it works both for and against her, but I don’t think that’s the same thing.”monkey-reading book

So here’s an example.  In my novel-in-progress there’s a 17-year-old tattooed, pierced, tough kid named Michelle who’s in trouble for stealing.  But she steals books.  She loves to read; libraries became a refuge when her home life was in chaos. And her love of reading gives me access to a more interesting inner life for her.

I don’t mean, necessarily, that this kind of contradiction makes it harder for characters to get what they want, only that by working against type I can deepen and expand who they are.  I find, especially at the beginning, that the more complexity I add, the more my characters surprise and intrigue me and the more I have to say about them.

Cindy adds, “And the more real it makes them seem, because real people are full of contradictions.”

Filed Under: Writing Tips Tagged With: beginning, Books, character, characterization, Cindy Handler, creative process, fiction writing, writing a novel

COMING MAY 2026: THE FOURSOME

A literary historical novel set in Civil War-era North Carolina, based on a true family story and told from the perspective of Sarah Bunker, one of two sisters who married Chang and Eng, the famous conjoined twins…learn more

Follow on Substack

Subscribe

Connect with Christina

Contact
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter

Copyright © 2025 Christina Baker Kline · Site design: Ilsa Brink