Write-Bytes Blog
Read this week’s edition in its entirety below or go to www.lindasgunther.com for all my blog posts for developing writers.
July 28, 2023
Topic: INANIMATE OBJECTS As CHARACTERS in YOUR STORY
We
can all remember seeing the award-winning film, Castaway, with Tom
Hanks. After crashing his plane, he’s stuck alone on a deserted island.
All he’s got to comfort him is a volley ball which he aptly names
Wilson. Hanks gives the object a face and some straw for hair. And in a
flash, Wilson becomes a secondary character in the film. Is Wilson a
pivotal character in this blockbuster? Some may argue, yes. But I don’t
think that really matters.
What matters
is that the audience grows attached to Wilson for a good part of the
story. Wilson is not “personified,” where the ball takes on human
characteristics. We don’t see the world from the volleyball’s point of
view. It’s not anthropomorphic. But the presence of Wilson, an inanimate
character, serves to deepen the moviegoer’s connection to the lead
character’s desperate situation. Wilson represents “comfort” for Hanks
who day by day strives to simply stay alive.
When
I look at books that I enjoy, I notice that sometimes an author will
feature one inanimate object that keeps re-appearing throughout the
course of the novel. That object serves to symbolize something important
to the protagonist; perhaps a struggle, a hope, an emotional conflict, a
memory that scrambles their mind and will not be forgotten.
In
the book, The Gold Finch by Donna Tartt, the painting is a focal point
and crops up continuously as we learn about Theo, the little boy. That
painting is the first painting Theo’s mother ever loved, and why he
saves it from destruction. The painting serves to represent many things:
genius, innocence, beauty, timelessness, and even resilience.
In
a movie, the filmmaker can zero in on the inanimate object with the
zoom or angle of the camera. But in a book, the author can only rely on
words, either through narration or action involving the object.
There
are novels where the inanimate object is in the actual title, and so
it’s obvious to the reader that this place or thing will be highlighted
in the story.
Examples of the inanimate objects actually appearing in a story’s title include:
The Moonstone by Wilkie Collins, where a giant diamond is the star of the story
The Purloined Letter by Edgar Allen Poe, where a letter is stolen from an unnamed royal woman
The Pearl by John Steinbeck, where the object brings bad luck to a family and ultimately leads to tragedy
In
other books, the inanimate object does not appear in the book title.
But the author has purposely placed it throughout the story with the
intent to create a relationship between the human character and the
object. This object keeps coming back into focus.
A
short memoir story I recently crafted, titled Double Date features me
as a young girl in the Bronx reluctantly spending a day out at the
theater one-on-one with my mother. The inanimate object that comes into
play is an old tattered wristwatch my mother keeps tucked in her purse,
its frayed leather wristband unusable, its oval face scratched, a few of
its tiny diamonds gone. But the watch still reads perfect time and is
treasured by my mother. That tiny watch symbolizes resilience and hope
to my troubled mom. Looking back now, maybe I should have given that
small watch a bigger role which may have serve to deepen the emotions of
my lead characters. Even as I write this, I’m learning.
Inanimate
objects planted in a story by an artful writer can offer readers a
literary “zing.” It’s another tool to consider as you craft a good tale.
Stay tuned for next week. Look for this BLOG every FRIDAY which will be posted at 9 a.m.
Next week’s WRITE-BYTES post will be titled REFLECTIVE NARRATOR IN MEMOIR WRITING.
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