Hello once more, my friends! I thought it’d be fun to continue sharing some of the inspiration for my Fallen Princeborn characters, this time including some kickin’ writing advice I got from the craft books 45 Master Characters and 20 Master Plots.
“But I hate templates!” Of course, no one wants their story to be considered some sort of cookie-cutter tale. What’s cool about these particular craft books is their analysis of how far back certain kinds of stories and character types go, and in so doing shows why these kinds of stories and characters are timeless and therefore always relevant no matter what the story.
First, let’s talk plot.
It’s all right to let yourself go when you write, because you’re using the best part of your creative self. But be suspicious of what comes out. Plot is your compass…Fiction is a lot more economical than life. Whereas life allows in anything, fiction is selective. Everything in your writing should relate to your intent. The rest, no matter how brilliantly written, should be taken out.
20 Master Plots is likely a book I’ve mentioned here before, but I can’t help but re-recommend it for both inspiration and reflection on the primary shapes a story has taken through literature. Now I love pantsing my way through plot development like many other NaNoWriMo folk, but when it comes to a series, stuff has to fit, dammit, and if you don’t take time to make things fit, you are promising yourself a story-world of plot holes and problems. You may very well mixing several of the “Master Plots,” such as Rivalry, Rescue, or Riddle, and there is nothing wrong with that. What is wrong is losing sight of what those Master Plots need in order to complete the story. For instance, I know I’ve got some Riddle in mine, as Charlotte’s curious abilities to handle Velidevour magic are not yet explained. Were I to leave that unexplained book after book until the series ends, readers would understandably give me a good rap with the knuckles and ask what’s going on. Pursuit is another Master Plot I use quite often, which Tobias defines here as–
Two games never seem to fail to capture the imagination of children: hide-and-seek and tag. Try to remember the excitement of being on the hunt and finding where everyone was a test of cleverness (how well you could hide) and nerve.
Tag is like that, too. Chasing and being chased, always trying to outwit the other person. We never lose our appetite for the game. For children as well as adults, there’s something fundamentally exciting in finding what has been hidden. As we grow older, we grow more sophisticated about how we play the game, but the thrill at the heart of it never changes. It is pure exhilaration.
The pursuit plot is the literary version of hide-and-seek.
Perhaps you’ve seen thrillers, suspense, and/or mysteries referring to the “cat and mouse” chase within the story. Welp, there you go! We love this game of seeking what’s hidden, or hunting the baddie. It means a constant foray into uncertainty with high stakes, and dire consequences will befall whomever fails. This drives any pursuit within Fallen Princeborn: Chosen, and I promise you now it will only grow in the stories to come.
Liam keeps an arrhythmic staccato pace with Dorjan. Scattered leaves and pine needles hide an array of sharp rocks. Liam’s feet seem to find them all, but with the sparks of Charlotte’s touch still alight within him, he cares little about the pain. Only Dorjan’s nose matters now, tracking the scent of their quarry. He slows, checks the ground, speeds up. Slows, checks the ground, speeds up. They move like this out of the sun-baked brambles and into the tattered forest.
A branch breaks. A creature cries. But nothing is close enough, not yet.
Dorjan is the first to slow. He points where a few drops of oil speckle upon a pine’s crusted sap. The brittle cove around them bears a pathetic green compared to the lushness of the foliage surrounding Rose House.
Then Liam feels it—a prickling around his wrist. Blast it. Already the mark is alive and moving. “The Wall is close.” He strains to look past the scattered clumps of life around them but sees nothing of the Wall surrounding River Vine.
Dorjan sniffs the air. “And Campion’s got company. Two, by the smell of it. Bully for us.”
The first time I read 45 Master Characters, I had already drafted my series’ first book (Stolen), and it struck me how much this description fit Dorjan, my rogue Princeborn who’s appeared in both my novels as well as my novella Night’s Tooth. Unlike other Velidevour who don’t care much about devouring the desires of an adult or child, Dorjan takes extra care to defend human children to the point of killing his own kind, as he does in Stolen:
Human once again, Dorjan grabs Jamie by the neck and pins him against a tree. “You wonder, do you, why I do this. Why I hunt you and Campion, why I seek a duel with Cein. Know, then: I do this for Jennifer Blair, whose brother you unlawfully stole, an innocent, a borderland child. A child!” His fist breaks skin and muscle and bone. Blood splatters Dorjan and leaks from Jamie’s mouth.
“Just… human… just… human…” he murmurs like a broken toy,
hiccupping between words.
“A human worth far more than you or me,” Dorjan says with a low voice that begins with a quiver and ends on a battle cry as his fist tears in and then slams out of Jamie’s ribcage, heart in hand. The moment his last artery snaps, Jamie’s eyes deteriorate into dull gems, onyx. Then mist. Another breath, and his entire body blows away in a cloud of violet embers.
Dorjan studies the black heart a moment before pitching it far into the trees.
“Let me know if Cein and Campion get my message, will you?”
Every character needs motivation to be what they are, be it through principals, wants, needs. Whether or not that purpose lifts them up to heroics or plunges them deep into villainy is up to you, fellow writers.
…the Male Messiah may not know of his connection to the Divine, but he may just be driven to accomplish something important. In this respect, he isn’t working on a spiritual goal. It seems his whole life is for one sole purpose and that purpose affects the lives of thousands of people…The Male Messiah has the ability to see the whole picture when it comes to problems. He never jumps to conclusions or gets involved in the gossip or drama of everyday life…
As the Punisher, he’ll curse the man who has “fallen” to teach him a lesson. He wants to break the man’s ego. He’ll kill the man’s spirit to transform him into his image. He may try to justify himself to others, but they’ll never fully understand his power or the burden he carries. They view his reprimands as harsh and uncaring. Many will leave his side, unable to follow his rules and treatment…He feels his word is law.
Just one unmet need–love, hope, peace, whatever else–and one’s soul is cast in darkness. This struck me good and hard as I developed another character in Fallen Princeborn: Chosen. You will know him when you meet him, this carrier of pale fire and song.
Stay tuned for my next post to read his introduction as well as information about a cracking podcast I got to do with fellow indie fantasy author Neil Mach.
Oh, and my kindle countdown sale begins October 23rd! If you know someone who loves dark fantasy and romance, now’s the time to send them to my Amazon page, nudge nudge. 🙂

Read on, share on, and write on, my friends!

20 Master Plots is a great book!
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It really is!
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Great Post Jean, both books are real treasures.
I can see from your examples how they make you think about and hone your plots and characters. I admit I do find the idea of using mythic archetype templates for characters very appealing. Mythic archetypes have survived thousands of years- all the way back to Gilgamesh and Melqart. Why fix what’s not broke?
Your extracts from you new novel really do whet the appetite too.
Wishing you all the luck in the world.
Paul
as you said in your
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Many thanks, Paul! Much like the skeletons within us–all our skeletons contain the same kinds of bones and in the same places (well, most of the time). It’s the minds that change, the skins that change, the souls that change. But within–so much the same.
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Oh wow! Another great article – I’m always fascinated by other writers’ writing process, particularly someone who writes to such a high standard and is so strapped for time! Thank you for sharing. And I LOVE Dorjan:))xxx
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Aw, shucks. You got me blushin’ before 6am, Sarah. Thank you!
And yes, Dorjan is a treat to write. 🙂 xxxxxxxx
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I’m sure he is – he just pings off the page.xxx
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Another great article Jean. Well done my lady x
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Many thanks, Sweet Shey! Hope you’re well. xxxxxxx
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Never better my friend. Hope you are too.
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Takin’ it one day at a time 🙂
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Exciting excerpts! Looking forward to seeing what’s next for these characters.
I was surprised at how much I enjoyed “20 Master Plots”– it was very well written, and didn’t feel nearly as formulaic as many of the writing craft books I run across. I notice that this version of “45 Characters” shares similar character art, but it’s by a different author. Are they working together somehow? Is it a similar style?
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That’s a great question! It was a collab–or series, you could say?–writer’s digest supervised. There’s actually a third I didn’t know existed until I wrote this post! https://www.amazon.com/Writers-Guide-Characterization-Archetypes-Development/dp/1599635577/
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I’ve put it on my wish list, but I am NOT ALLOWED to buy any more writing craft books until I actually find time to write again. And these days I don’t even have time to read. Or cook. Or clean house. (Don’t look now, it’s a hot disaster over here.) But I can’t keep getting new deadlines piled on top of old ones forever, this has got to end eventually… and WOW am I going to have a nice long break then.
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HA! I remember my daughter’s piano teacher wondering about continuing lessons, but this time in our house. “So long as you don’t mind our tornado,” I said, and it’s still true. This home is one. Halloweeny. MESS. 🙂 We just need to do what we can without stressing ourselves out 🙂
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Tornado is a good visual for that, yes!
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How skillfully you put these lessons to work, Jean! Cracking writing every time 🙂
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Aw, shucks, Chris, thanks! 🙂 xxxxx
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Beautifully illustrated, Jean. This is a fascinating glimpse into the process and a lovely example of your writing. What a hook!
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Many thanks, Friend! I’ve been nagging Bo to get me the third book in this craft series for Christmas. 🙂
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No surprises for you, then!
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Hee hee! We’re very clear with each other about our Amazon lists. 🙂
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So excited to read the new work. It’s going to be awesome xxx
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You just take care before reading it to Hawklad. Situations get pretty dark here! xxxxx
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Whisper it but he can maybe have a go reading it himself. Slowly, some help, but maybe I’m not required.
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So long as you promise pre-read the bits he does–there are some scenes I reeeeeally don’t think you’ll want him reading.
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