12 Questions to Ask Your Character about the Setting She Is In

On Throwback Thursday, we’re looking at excerpts from past posts on Live Write Thrive

Today’s post is from Settings in Your Novel That Work As Triggers:

When choosing settings for your scenes, you want to think about the kinds of places that will allow the emotions, needs, dreams, and fears of your characters to come out.

Certain places will trigger these things to come to the surface and will stir memories. Your character has a past, and even if she never visits any of the places in her past in your novel, other places can draw out feelings and memories. This happens to us all the time.

Of course, if you are putting your characters in places they’ve been before, or they are living in the same town their whole life, those memories and feelings are closer to the surface.

The point it, you want to use your setting to help bring out your themes, drive your plot, and reveal character. You don’t have to do this, but by ignoring setting you are missing out on a great tool in your writer’s toolbox that you can use in a powerful way.

Ask Your Character

Here are some questions you can ask your character about the setting she finds herself in, whether it’s the overall setting of the novel or a particular place in a particular scene you want to write:

  1. What might be special about this place that a person passing through might not notice?
  2. How does she feel when she is there?
  3. What memory or emotion does the place evoke in her and why? Can you come up with something that happened there that ties into the wound from her past? To a hope or dream she may have had but lost somewhere along the way?
  4. How does she look at not just the place but the kind of life she has there (professional, family, community)?
  5. What is her one special secret place she likes to go to and what does she do there?
  6. What is the one place she avoids and would never go to?
  7. What can she notice while she is there that no one else notices?
  8. What special thing can you have happen in this special place that reveal something secret about her? About her dreams? About her fears?
  9. What one memory can you come up with that is triggered by her being in this place?
  10. What was/is her happiest moment in this place? Her saddest?
  11. If she has come back after a period of time, how has this place changed for her, and how does that change make her feel? Happy, sad, nostalgic, fearful?
  12. What conflicting feelings does she have about being there?

 Setting That Triggers Memories

One novel that comes to my mind in posing these questions is Barbara Kingsolver’s Animal Dreams. This book is all about a character who is dealing with setting. Her protagonist has returned to the town she grew up in after many years. Throughout the novel as she deals with her senile father, the neighbors she thought she knew, and her memories that come back to haunt her, we watch how this place and her past assault and change her radically.

It’s a book all about how setting can trigger change and awareness. How it can make us step back and assess out present lives in the light of our past.

So, as you think about setting for your novel overall and for individual scenes, think about the themes you are bringing out. Think about not just the plot points the setting can help reveal but also the deep character traits that can be triggered by locale and environment.

We like to stroll down memory lane—both figuratively and literally. Sometimes we do it out of a masochistic desire to feel hurt or pain, or to wallow in painful memories. Other times it’s out of nostalgia, to try to capture a feeling we somehow lost along the way.

These are things your characters can do too. They are human things we humans do. So when you get ready to write a scene, don’t just plop your character in the closest coffee shop down the street. First think about what you need to reveal in the scene. Then think of the best place to put your character so that this moment in the scene will be enhanced or triggered by the setting.

Let her look at something she’s seen before but in a different way. Then watch what happens.


Heart_of_Your_Story_ebook coverThis, and more about setting, is explored in rich detail in Writing the Heart of Your Story.

Get yours here!

I read dozens of writing craft books every year. All too many of them are ho-hum, been-there-done-that. This one is absotively posolutely not. Lakin offers a refreshingly structured—and yet freeing—approach to not just creating a solidly entertaining story, but to crafting a tale of emotional resonance and resilience. Her useful writing exercises and spot-on story sense offers epiphany after epiphany. This is one I will read and reread.

~ K. M. Weiland, author of Structuring Your Novel

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One Comment

  1. Great questions. Reminds me of Seeker by Jack McDevit who I thought was very creative when it came to fleshing out the setting from the protagonist’s POV. Next time I come across a creative piece I’ll think about the questions that the author may have asked.

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