MasterOfWhispers
Star
- Joined
- Jan 15, 2009
This, I've always been curious about. Many authors of many stories I've noticed tend to have the main character have the same gender as them. Of course there are many exceptions like J.K Rowling or Ursala Le Guin. Plus there are a host of male authors who write incredible female secondary characters and protagonists. When you write a character of the opposite gender, do you base them of people you know in real life, or do you shape them into the ideal girl or boy you'd would love to be with. Or do you do something else all together.
Me: I tend to write them as the ideal girl I'd like to have. More and more, as I continue to write, I find myself trying to give more variations to the female characters even going as far as giving them my own flaws and attributes.
So what do you think, When you write the character of an opposite Gender, what kind of how do you write them and what kind of characteristics do you give them. Are they more masculine, more Feminine?
Me: I tend to write them as the ideal girl I'd like to have. More and more, as I continue to write, I find myself trying to give more variations to the female characters even going as far as giving them my own flaws and attributes.
So what do you think, When you write the character of an opposite Gender, what kind of how do you write them and what kind of characteristics do you give them. Are they more masculine, more Feminine?