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So
you’re finally finished. You stayed up half the night and your fingers are all twisted
up from hours of nonstop typing, but your masterpiece is complete: “The
Adventures of Ashleigh Arabella Julia Jones-McCartney, the Prettiest Girl
in the World.” You
can’t wait to post this baby on the web.
After all, who wouldn’t want to read about a girl with cascading
blonde hair who can speak three languages, fix cars, and bake a wicked
crumb cake? This is the true, untold story of the Beatles—Ashleigh
Arabella convinces Brian Epstein to go the Cavern Club, where he signs the
boys on the spot and makes Ashie-Poo the fifth Beatle.
She and Paul McCartney fall madly in love, get married the next day
and have lots of babies. The end. Oh, the
wonder of it all! This story
is perfection itself...right? Hold
on there. Don’t even think
about clicking that mouse button just yet.
Houston, we have a problem—and that problem is your character.
And I mean character in the loosest sense of the word. What
you’ve just written is called a “Mary Sue.”
If you’ve never heard the term before, Mary-Sue is little more
than an avatar, a product of wishes and daydreams.
You don’t have a time machine, you can’t go back to the sixties
and meet the Beatles yourself...so you dream up a character to live out
your adventures for you. Mary
Sue is often described as a perfect person, but I’ll clarify that a
little: Mary-Sue is the author’s version of a perfect person.
She often has a glamorous name, sometimes just a fancier spelling
of the author’s name. She takes many forms: Paul’s perky little
sister, Cynthia’s best friend, cutest little redhead in the Cavern Club.
Mary Sue is strikingly beautiful, has really nice hair, eyes of an
unusual color, a fiery personality, many talents, and is either loved or
envied by the main characters. Maybe
something terrible happened to her in the past, which only makes the
others love her even more. She
can say or do no wrong. She
saves the day, seduces the Beatle of her dreams, or dies a tragic
death...or any combination of the three.
And she’s universally despised in the world of fanfiction. Wait
a minute, you say. Despised? You
never meant to write anything like that!
It was just a harmless little fantasy you had about meeting the
Beatles. All you ever did was
wonder what it felt like when your favorite Beatle held you in his arms. You only gave your character that beautiful blond hair and
that breathtaking singing voice because your own hair is drab and boring
and...well, you’ve always wanted to be able to sing yourself. All you wanted to do was to make your character wonderful so
people would like her. Don’t
panic. Your heroine isn’t
necessarily doomed to your PC’s recycle bin.
Keep reading to learn what makes Mary Sues so bad in the first
place and how you can turn your Mary Sue into an interesting, well-rounded
character. Little
Miss Perfect It’s
only natural that an author wants the audience to like his or her
character. Writing about
flawless people, however, isn’t going to accomplish this.
You’ve heard the term “Little Miss Perfect” before, right?
Well, it’s not meant to be a compliment. Take
a minute and think about the most perfect person in your life.
Think about that girl at your school or job, the one who never has
a hair out of place, the one who always has something clever to say in
class or a meeting, the one who can get away with anything.
She has a fabulous wardrobe, a cool set of friends, a drool-worthy
boyfriend, an expensive car. Do
you want to be like her? Probably. But do
you actually like her all that much?
Probably not. As
a matter of fact, you might have heard others gossiping about her behind
her back, or maybe you rolled your eyes when your boss praised her for yet
another one of her brilliant ideas. Little
Miss Perfect saves the day again. See
what I mean? Well, the rules
don’t change much when it comes to writing fanfiction.
We hate perfect people in our stories just as much as we hate them
in real life...and for a couple different reasons. First
of all, there’s no such thing as a truly perfect person.
Even that seemingly flawless girl you know has a bad habit or
something she’d like to change about herself.
See, the trick to writing a good story is to make it as true to
life as possible. Even if you’re writing about the Beatles in the future or
on a distant planet, there needs to be something your audience can
recognize and identify with in order for them to stay interested. Most people already knows there’s no such thing as a
perfect person, so when they start a story about someone who is perfect,
nine times out of ten they’re going to think, “Yeah, right!” and
stop reading. When you spend
a lot of time and hard work on a story, “Yeah, right!” probably
isn’t the reaction you want. Second,
and most important, perfect people are BORING.
There’s no way your story will have any
real problems or drama – after all, Mary Sue is so perfect, how
could anything bad possibly happen to her?
And besides, there are hundreds, maybe thousands, of other stories
on the web exactly like yours: beautiful, wonderful girl gets the Beatle
of her dreams and rescues him/marries him/dies.
Nobody wants to read yet another version of someone else’s
perfect girl. Giving your character more talents or longer hair won’t
make her a more interesting person; it’s still the same old Mary Sue
we’ve read a hundred times before. The
Golden Rules That
said, not all Mary Sues are bad. It’s
not easy, but a Beatle romance can be done...and done well, too.
Here are a few simple tips that will help you make sure your
heroine is a benefit to your Beatles’ story and not just your own
personal self-esteem booster. A
couple other name notes. When you write, try to think of the time period in which your
story is set. Is your fabulous
name plausible for the time period, or will she be the only person in the
Cavern Club named Kayla or Nikki? Keep
in mind that if a name is en vogue today, it probably wasn’t forty
years ago, so you’re going to have to do a little research.
Look up lists of popular names for that time; also look back at
public figures, like singers or movie stars.
And unless you’re writing about the actual person, don’t use
canon names. You might think
it’s really clever that your heroine has the same name as John’s
beloved, deceased mother. It’s
not. 2)
The more time you spend telling us how gorgeous your character is,
the more likely your story will suffer for it.
How long do you focus on her physical appearance?
A paragraph? A page?
A popular way to begin fanfiction is to introduce the heroine and
then give her complete physical description and life history.
But the trouble with this is, once the audience reads it, they can
already figure out what kind of story you wrote and there’s no need for
them to read any more. Besides, if you have a story driven entirely by how your
character looks, it probably isn’t a very good story to begin with. Think
of it this way. Let’s say
you’re at a party, and you’ve spent hours making yourself look as
fabulous as you possibly can. Then,
in walks your biggest rival, with her perfect hairstyle and her expensive
new tube dress that just barely covers her long, sexy legs—and suddenly,
you don’t feel so fabulous anymore. Which
character do you think the audience will identify with more: Little Miss
Perfect or the girl who worries she could never measure up?
Now this doesn’t mean your character can’t be pretty.
But remember, a person doesn’t have to be stunningly beautiful to
be loved. If this were true, then 99.9% of the people in the world
would spend their lives miserable and alone, and we can see that isn’t the
case. One
last thing: try to stay away from flowery metaphors, as in don’t describe
her eyes as “two pools of glistening sapphire” or anything else that’s
more likely to make your reader gag than gush.
“Blue” will work just as well...probably better. 3)
Keep her amazing talents to a minimum.
Now we all have our favorite hobbies, and everyone’s good at doing something.
The problem comes when your character is a whiz at anything and
everything she tries. Someone
gives her a paintbrush, and even though’s she never held one before, she
whips up a brilliant, Picasso-like abstract with her eyes closed...then
takes her fluffy chocolate souffle out of the oven and sets a new world
record in the hundred-meter dash. Sound
like anybody you know? Didn’t
think so. Remember,
you’re going for realism here. What
happens when real people try something they’ve never tried before?
Well, they might struggle with it at first, make a few mistakes,
sometimes fall flat on their faces. Maybe
your heroine is a brilliant artist...but reduces everything in the kitchen
to charcoal. Or maybe she can
whip up a mean Trout Amandine...but put a canvas in front of her and she
can’t come up with anything more than a couple of wobbly stick figures.
That’s real life, and that’s what keeps the audience reading. *
Ask yourself this question—what’s your story actually about?
“Girl meets author’s favorite Beatle and falls in love with
him.” Fair enough.
There are plenty of stories, even published ones, that have a similar
theme. “Girl meets author’s
favorite Beatle, does amazing things to impress said Beatle, has pages and
pages of hot sex, again with said Beatle, then marries him and lives happily
ever after.” BORING! What
really makes a good story is conflict.
Character gets into a jam, character needs to get herself out.
If you can’t come up with anything better than, George and Paul
both love her and she doesn’t know who to pick, then you’re going to
turn off a lot of readers. Try
to give your character a real problem, one where the solution might not come
so easily at first. She has to
give a big speech in order to pass a difficult class, but she has such bad
stage fright that she freezes up every time she gets to the microphone.
How will she ever pass that class?
Or maybe she has to be able to ride a horse to get a great movie
part, but she’s never done it before.
So she goes out to take lessons—only she falls off on the first day
and breaks her leg. Now how’s
she going to get that great part? Think
about your own relationship with your husband or boyfriend, or study another
couple like your parents or grandparents.
Is it all love, flowers, and sex, 24-7?
Of course not. Sometimes those couples fight, have misunderstandings, or
burp and fart next to each other in bed.
Even though the Beatles are arguably the most famous public figures
who ever lived, all four of them were also human beings like the rest of
us—so write them that way. And
remember, when you’re writing about real people, you have to write them
the way they really were, not the way you want them to be.
Paul McCartney went by Paul, not James; therefore he’d be unlikely
to let any of his girlfriends call him James, no matter how amazing they
were or how much you like the name.
John Lennon was a man who hid his insecurities behind a biting,
sometimes cruel sense of humor. So he probably wouldn’t open up to the first pretty face he
saw, no matter how much you’ve dreamed of him doing it. Basically,
it all comes down to this. You
want to fashion your character after yourself, fine.
Just make sure it’s the real you—the one with hair that
won’t hold a curl even after you showered it with two bottles of
hairspray, who snores like a buzzsaw and wakes up with terrible bedhead,
who’s afraid of spiders, and sometimes says the wrong thing, and always
worries about your grades, or your boss from hell, or your spindly little
bird legs. Your faults are what
make you human. Well,
your audience is human too. We
like reading about people who are imperfect, just like us, with hopes and
fears and dreams and flaws. The
best characters are the ones we can identify with, the ones where we can
say, “Yeah, I’ve felt that way, too.”
And we’ll identify a lot more with the real you, not
you-only-taller-prettier-smarter-kinder-wittier-sweeter-perfect. Got
it? Good.
Now go finish that masterpiece. |
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Lisa Wilkinson has been working on her Beatles fanfiction story for nearly five years, but she has been writing since she was seven years old. (She's learned a lot since then and has hopefully gotten a little better!) She is currently a graduating senior at San Jose State University majoring in Nutrition and Food Science. |
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