Postby Maledicte » Sun Feb 26, 2006 11:13 pm
I think it was Orson Scott Card who recommended setting up an "interview" with one of your characters and writing it down. Similar to what ShiroiHikari said, only the character may talk about something else completely, ramble on and on, give monosyllabic answers, or get offended. You build up and learn a lot about your characters this way.
Personally, I write character profiles that go past height-weight-age, and into little things that make people special--kind of music they like to listen to, religion, pet peeves, not-quite-noticeable habits, where they shop, random talent they have, etc. That way, even if their background or story is formulaic, the character makes it fresh because of how they relate and react to things.
I guess what I'm trying to say is, there's no need to make your character so unstereotypical as to be beyond belief. Just because he's an elf prince doesn't mean he has to be ugly, one-legged, incredibly foul-mouthed, laugh like a donkey, stub his toe constantly, have blue polkadots left over from a childhood disease and have random wings that sprout out of his back in order to be original. (though, if you did come up with a character like that, I'd most likely read it.)