Back Story: Too Much, Too
Soon?
Copyright Cynthia VanRooy - All Rights
Reserved
Ever have the experience of
meeting someone at a party and within minutes you’ve heard
about their three miscarriages, the ex-husband they left
because of his drinking, the brother who’s in prison, but
it’s not his fault, his friends got him into trouble, and
the uncle who’s suspected of using drugs? What’s your
reaction? Do you want to know this person better, pursue
this new relationship further? Hardly! You can’t wait get
away from this stranger you already know too much
about.
This is the most
common mistake new romance writers make—subjecting their
reader to the same kind of too-much-too-soon information
dump. It’s understandable. We want the reader to love our
heroes and heroines as much as we do, to understand why
they do what they do. Our mistake is in wanting the reader
to understand before we’ve given them a reason to
care.
If the stranger
were your best friend instead, that would change your
reaction considerably to the details they relayed. This
holds true for your fictional characters, too. The reader
needs to become emotionally involved with them, become
caught up in the present moment of the characters’ lives
before they can be interested in anything that happened
before the story started.
That’s what
backstory is—the events that happened prior to page one
that led up to the story. The most dangerous thing about
backstory is that it’s boring. Nothing is happening to
engage the reader. The characters aren’t acting. You’re
just relaying information about them in the most
uninteresting way possible—telling.
Rather than start
your novel with backstory, start with the culminating
action that is the result of that backstory. Give the
reader only as much information as they need to follow that
action without becoming confused. Trust the reader. They’re
bright, they’ll get it. Honest. Need an example? Story
opens . . .
A woman is
driving at night. The only things keeping her weary,
hurting body awake are tension and adrenaline. She has to
put as much distance between herself and Richard as she
can, but she knows she needs to stop and rest soon before
she becomes a menace to anyone else on the road. She takes
the next exit off the freeway and finds herself in a small,
seedy-looking town, the stores all closed and the streets
mostly deserted. She spots a motel up ahead. She pulls her
car into the parking spot in front of the orange neon
lights proclaiming "office."
With an effort
she releases the steering wheel, only to discover her hands
are shaking. She takes a couple of deep breaths trying to
get herself under control, then grabs her purse and opens
the car door.
In the office
the clerk hands her a pen and shoves the register toward
her. She hesitates and has a moment of panic as she tries
to decide whether to use her own name. No, better not. She
signs her first grade teacher’s name, the only one she can
think of. The clerk stares at her left eye and she can feel
it’s swollen. She wonders if it has begun to turn black.
The clerk hands her the room key and she hurries to escape
his scrutiny.
Once in her room
she bolts the door and puts on the chain before turning on
the light and dropping her bag. She’s so tired she wants to
collapse, but knows she’ll sleep better after a warm shower
to ease the aches. As she peels off her clothes she notes
in the mirror the bruises blooming on her ribs and hip. And
yes, her eye has turned black.
After a shower
that does little to relieve the pain, she is making her way
from the bathroom when the phone rings. She freezes,
clutching the towel tightly around her, her hands fisted in
the terrycloth. Oh, God, he’s found her already. The phone
continues to peal insistently and she reaches out a
trembling hand and lifts the receiver.
Nothing confusing
here, you understand what’s happening, The passage raised
some questions, but that’s a good thing. That’s how you
draw the reader in. Who is Richard? Why is she running away
from him? What will happen if he finds her? Is he the one
who hurt her?
To get hooked into
this character and this story you didn’t need to know the
woman ran away at sixteen to escape her abusive home life,
that she lived on the streets for two years, that she got
her act together and worked her way through college, that
Richard is a musician she met in a coffee house where she
worked, that she fell in love with him because of his
protectiveness, that the protectiveness revealed itself
shortly as control, and that it turned into the same kind
of abusive behavior she used to get from her father that
she had promised herself never to take again.
Whew.
Ideally, that
backstory would be fed to the reader a little at a time, as
they needed it. One of the best ways to impart backstory is
in dialog, where realistically the hero/heroine might
reveal it to the other. Dialog, with its action and white
space on the page, is reader-friendly and interesting, as
opposed to long passages of introspection where the
character is doing nothing but thinking.
Aren’t convinced
yet you should avoid starting your book with backstory? An
editor once told me if she wasn’t engaged in the story by
page five, she wouldn’t read any further before rejecting a
manuscript. Think that’s harsh? She’s being charitable.
Most editors make that decision by page three. Some new
writers try the trick of reversing a page in their
manuscript when they send it in. Then when they get it back
rejected and the page is still reversed, they regard this
as proof the editor never actually read their story. Well .
. . yes, they did. They read as much as they needed to in
order to know they weren’t interested in reading any
more.
You have three
pages to interest the editor/reader in your novel. Don’t
waste them on backstory. Throw the reader right into the
action. A hundred years ago writers had the luxury of
beginning a story with "Once upon a time . . ." Today’s
readers are too impatient. Toss them right into the garden
with a sobbing Cinderella and her fairy godmother and
explain later. Your readers will thank you for
it.
About
the author: Cynthia VanRooy is an award
winning romance novelist with eight books published by both
print and epublishers. Her ninth romance will be released
late 2005 by New Age Dimensions. Additional details can be
found at Cynthia's
website.