Tuesday, June 25, 2013




Beth K. Vogt is a nonfiction author and editor who said she’d never write fiction. She’s the wife of an air force physician who said she’d never marry a doctor—or anyone in the military. She’s a mom of four who said she’d never have kids. She’s discovered that God’s best often waits behind the doors marked “Never.”





If you give a character a Lie that is tied to some Dark Moment in his past. . .he is going to believe it.


And if he believes it … he is going to act certain ways in both his relationships with people and with God.

And if his relationships with people and with God are influenced by a Lie he believes, than he’s going to make mistakes – both with the people he loves and the God who loves him.

With that brief nod to If You Give a Mouse a Cookie by children’s author Laura Numeroff, let’s talk about why lies can be good things – at least within the context of writing compelling characters.

We are taught early and often that it’s wrong to tell lies, but it’s not until much later in life that we are taught not to embrace lies. But by then, it’s too late – we’ve listened to lies about ourselves and believe them to be true.

While we often carry around a multitude of lies-that-we-believe-are-true, there is usually one lie – the LIE – that affects us more than all the others. This Lie is created by some sort of Dark Moment in our past – an experience that wounded us emotionally and possibly physically.

Let me specific:

In 2007, a life-threatening illness took me down for months. In the early days of the illness, my doctor-husband closed down his practice and stayed with me around the clock. My fever was almost 104 and at times I didn’t recognize him. Here’s what we didn’t realize until 18 months ago: In the midst of all the fear and stress and questions, our then six-year-old daughter sat outside my bedroom door, waiting for her daddy to come out and tell her that I had died. 

Dark Moment for my daughter? Yes.

And the Lie she believes because of that incident six years ago is that I’m going to leave her – at any time, without notice. If my husband and I allow our daughter to continue believing this Lie instead of reassuring her, praying with her, telling her who God is – that Dark Moment could affect her relationships with both God and others.

Now let’s talk about when lies are good. Your fictional characters need to believe a Lie – and you, as the author, need to know what the Lie is. 

Your character’s past – who  they were before they appeared on page one of your manuscript – determines why they say certain things. Why they make certain decisions. Why they stiff-arm God. Why they want nothing to do with love.

Think of wrapping a thin piece of rope around a wooden top and then releasing it to spin, spin, spin … and topple. The rope represents your character’s Lie. The Lie influences your character’s choices and beliefs because they believe the Lie is true. 

In Catch a Falling Star, my latest release, my heroine Kendall believes the Lie that she will never be picked. Why? Because she had severe childhood asthma, and was one of those kids in school who was never picked in gym class. Her Dark Moment, which involved her high school hopes for romance, proved the “I’ll never be picked” Lie in the worst possible way.  

Forget the adage not to tell lies. As an author, you want to craft characters that readers care about. One key to doing that is to create the Lies your hero and heroine believe. You understand how one major Lie affects them – emotionally and spiritually. Use the Lie to deepen your story. Then weave in the spiritual truth and allow God to heal the Lie. You’ve created true-to-life fictional characters. After all, we’ve all believed lies. And we know the release – the freedom – in discovering and embracing the truth.

What about you? Are you telling your imaginary characters lies?

Return Friday for a chance to win a copy of Beth's latest release "Catch a Falling Star."

8 comments :

  1. I love a good lie. A seeping, hot, irritating one that grinds its way into my character's soul. "You are nothing, you are filth". And I love the chance to sing Christ's redemptive love over her, through the love of her family and the one person who can reach inside and save her. The hero? Yes, but only when he's armed with the love of Jesus.

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  2. It's not something I've thought about, but I don't define anything about my characters a priori. It may be both a strength and a weakness that they are born and grow with the story, and any essential backstory - like The Lie - becomes an organic part of their growth.

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  3. Jennifer: I love weaving in a Lie -- because I know I am also weaving in the truth -- God's Truth -- that will set my character free, emotionally and spiritually. It's one of the best parts of writing a novel!
    And Andrew, here's the interesting thing: I think Lies can create both strengths in weaknesses in both real and imaginary characters -- becoming an organic part of our (and their) growth.

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  4. Great stuff, Beth! Giving characters a lie journey has definitely been a game-changer in my own writing!

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  5. Wow. My mind is just spinning. Excellent thoughts for writing - but it's really made me think realistically, too, about people and friends and the lies we allow to control us. About what lie was behind transforming me from a chipper, outgoing kid to a massively shy teenager. Kinda like the movie, Hitch, and the defining moments they talk about in the film. I'm going to be chewing on this for a long time. If you give a person a deep thought... ;)

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  6. Melissa: It's been fun to walk the writing road with you and learn about Wounds and Lies ... yeah, that sounds odd, I know ... ;o)

    Lady Saotome: If you give a person a deep thought ... oh yes indeed ... I've pondered this whole process both personally and professionally!

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  7. Ooooh! Love this, Beth! I've been plotting a new story-- going to need to focus a little on the Lie element. I hadn't really thought of it in such terms.

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  8. Jennifer: So glad this helped you a bit as you plot your new story. (Gonna tell me a bit more about it, hhmmm?)

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