The topic
for blog posts this month is battlegrounds. But I’d like to focus on emotional
battlegrounds. Don’t get me wrong. Actual battles are important for YA writing.
Conflict needs to come to fruition since stakes can’t be hypothetical, meaning
there needs to be a payoff. An emotional battleground informs YA writing, though, because characters need stakes and goals, as emotional layering is ultimately
the last aspect of writing that authors need to master. For example, a writer
can improve with imagery, voice, and dialogue, but might not understand the
emotional aspect of YA fiction.
To help
give an example of emotional battlegrounds, I’d like to mention my YA Fantasy
novel IN THE NAME OF MAGIC (which is forthcoming from NineStar Press with a
tentative release date of June 11, 2018). I don’t just have intense action,
there’s also a lot at stake emotionally, and not just for my main character. One
example is my main character, Maximillian, who hides his non-magical best
friend, Katherine, when Queen Vivian wages a campaign against non-magical
people. The obvious implication is Maximillian and his parents risk life or
death by giving Katherine shelter. And while that fact is true, there’s more.
The emotional layer is that Maximillian is always in a heightened state. The concrete
detail (hiding Katherine) informs how he feels in any given moment since he needs
to navigate life carefully. Stefan and Anastasia are another example of
illustrating emotional battlegrounds. They have their own reasons for hating
Queen Vivian (their older sister), and that fact informs their choices and
feelings throughout the novel.
Depth is
also important for emotional battlegrounds, and I’m not just talking about what
is at stake for one character. I’m also referring to when an issue pops in YA
fiction. With IN THE NAME OF MAGIC, said issue is oppression against
non-magical people. Obviously, oppression and bigotry is wrong. However, I don’t
want the issue to be cartoon-like, which means I need a character to take Queen
Vivian’s side. And that character is Taylor. Just like in real life when people
are on the wrong sides of issues, Taylor is also on the wrong side of
oppression against non-magical despite how he’s dating Katherine (a non-magical
person). Furthermore, I give Taylor a real reason why he would be on the wrong
side of oppression, i.e. he’s not a flat character since his family has been
having financial trouble, and that’s why he supports Queen Vivian—she’s
offering the snake oil of fixing Magnifico’s economic problems.
Another way
to look at emotional battlegrounds is banter. A scene doesn’t always have to be
life or death to provide stakes. The former ABC
television show Revenge might be TV
as opposed to YA Fiction, but still illustrates the importance of emotional
battlegrounds. The main character, Emily, always has intense banter with her
enemy, Victoria, even when weapons aren’t present. The banter between Emily and
Victoria goes beyond melodrama. There intense verbal confrontations are always
rooted in concrete facts as opposed to only trading insults.
Anyway, I
hope the above discussion about emotional battlegrounds helps, and informs
your writing!!!
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