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Backstory: the story begins

This entry is part 1 of 20 in the series Backstory

Today is the day: we finally begin our series on backstory!

Backstory is the events that happened before your story starts. Your characters need backstory—but your story may not.

Our characters do need backstory—they need to have come from somewhere, have had experiences that shaped their outlook, attitudes, personalities, and reactions. Backstory rounds out a character, helps us to make their actions consistent and explains their motivations. Thus, backstory can and should be a huge tool for characterization and creating well-rounded characters.

But does your story need backstory included in its pages? The answer is probably yes—but the general rule is that to actually stop the story to play all that out as little and infrequently as possible.

Most of the time, backstory does influence the plot directly: at least part of the important events of a story come before the actual “start” of the story. Take Hamlet, for example: before the play starts, the story events are already in motion—his father is already murdered, and his uncle has already married his mother.

The backstory that creates the opening circumstances may be explained fairly quickly—but some of the backstory may not be revealed until the climax (such as the identity of the murderer) or the resolution (the hero[ine] explains why s/he acts in a certain way—though that may not be the best example. Readers get frustrated with inexplicable actions as much as characters do, so if it’s a POV character, we’d want to explore that a little more).

Coming up: how to tell story from backstory (i.e. knowing when to start your story), avoiding infodumps, using backstory to shape your characters, and a guest post by one of my favorite writing instructors, Margie Lawson!

What do you think? How do you define and use backstory?

Photo by Angela Shupe