(Side note: I've updated the
Night Sky in Chiang Mai post to link to other writers who did the same exercise, if you're interested. Now back to our regularly scheduled blog entry...)
Last time, I gave a list of
10 things we like in characters. The short version was:
- Courage.
- Fair Play.
- Humility.
- Draftee/Volunteer.
- Dependable.
- Clever.
- Victim.
- Savior.
- Sacrifice.
- Goals and Dreams.
The things that make us hate a character (also derived from
Characters & Viewpoint) is almost, but not quite, the opposite.
- Liar: Cheats, lies, breaks their promises. Their reasons for lying matter just as much as the lie itself, of course.
- Self-Centered: Brags. Readily takes credit for accomplishments. Takes criticism poorly. Blames others, complains, or whines about their problems.
- Self-Appointed: Puts themselves in a position they did not earn, where they are uninvited or do not belong. A usurper.
- Arrogant: We like clever characters, but a character who knows they are smarter or better than other people (or worse, simply thinks they are) is despicable.
- Bully: Makes others suffer for their own enjoyment or to exercise control over them.
Like the other list, these are only guidelines. Real people, and therefore real characters, are a lot more complicated than this, as are our feelings towards them. The real world can't typically be separated into "good people" and "bad people." In the same way, not every story has identifiable heroes and villains. I think it's important for writers to know what makes the reader love or hate our characters. Often the reader won't know themselves. In such cases these lists might be useful.
This is also not a checklist. It's rarely a good idea to give a villain all these traits. Just as the most lovable character is mostly good with some flaws, the best villains are the ones who are mostly evil with some sympathetic traits as well.
Above all, any good villain - any good character, actually - is the hero of their own story. No matter how evil or comical or insane somebody is, they believe that what they are doing is right. If the reader is allowed to see their version of events, they may not like them, but they will respect them and, more importantly, they will
believe in them. That's the real goal.