Using Backstory to Enhance Your Novel

Those Who Forget History: Using Backstory to Enhance Your Novel

Summary
Those Who Forget History: Using Backstory to Enhance Your Novel, is a four-week long, interactive on-line workshop. Using lectures, supplemental information, and specific tools, students will examine how to use backstory effectively to enhance their stories using elements of a character’s past. There will be assignments after each lesson, and participants will be encouraged to submit their “homework” as well as to ask questions.

We will cover:

•What is Backstory?

•Flashbacks and How to Use Them,

•The Five Ws of Backstory—Who, What, Where, When and Why—of a character’s past.

•Prologues—how to use a prologue to provide backstory.

•Dialogue—how to manipulate your readers by using a character’s dialogue to hint at backstory.

• Weaving—how to weave backstory into your story.

•Inner Thought—revealing your character’s backstory through inner thought.

•What Do They Want?—how your character’s backstory can affect his goals.

Lessons will be given twice a week, on Mondays and Wednesdays. Fridays will be kept for questions, assignments, and discussion.

Speaker
Cynthia Owens  - I believe I was destined to be interested in history. One of my distant ancestors, Thomas Aubert, reportedly sailed up the St. Lawrence River to discover Canada some 26 years before Jacques Cartier’s 1534 voyage. Another relative was a 17thCentury “King’s Girl,” one of a group of young unmarried girls sent to New France (now the province of Quebec) as brides for the habitants (settlers) there.

A former journalist and lifelong Celtophile, I enjoyed a previous career as a reporter/editor for a small chain of community newspapers before returning to my first love, romantic fiction. My stories usually include an Irish setting, hero or heroine, and sometimes all three. My three best holidays were my visits to Ireland in 2009, 2017, and 2018.

When
9/6/2021 - 10/1/2021

Sign In