Subject: A familiar dilemma.
Author:
Posted on: 2011-09-16 14:25:00 UTC
Basically, I think it boils down to not being afraid to let your characters look silly sometimes. It sort of goes along with not being Sues. They can be serious, talented, badass, whatever—but the Narrative Laws are there to make them fall on their butts once in a while, and so they should, because they're not perfect. There are some situations that demand a pie in the face, for instance, even if the recipient is a member of the proud and ancient race of the Noldor.
I struggle with this myself, but my strategy has basically been "straight man and fall guy" partnerships. With Nume and Ilraen, we've got Nume as the straight-laced veteran agent and Ilraen the bumbling newbie—and yet, the joke is very often on Nume, since his seriousness sets him up to go down hard when he does take a fall, and Ilraen gets more savvy every mission, enough to be the cause of humor rather than the victim of it every once in a while. That's the idea, anyway. I don't know how well I pull any of it off.
Derik's partner has been a kender. Enough said on that score. In his case, though, I'm trying more to play up his mood swings and general unpredictability for laughs.
A lot of the humor of a PPC mission comes from the badfic, though. The thing is, bad writing is funny. Typos and the effects of clumsy wording and bad logic—the real effects, the ones the writers miss by not checking their work—can be hilarious. One of my favorites right now is Gandalf's "Very relieved am I to know you are very much undead mellon-nin," from "Ring Child." That mission was full of stuff like that. Made our job . . . not easier, really, but definitely worthwhile. *g*
I still struggle with spending too much time in my characters' heads, though. What I like about writing is getting in there and working out what makes them tick, which isn't necessarily interesting to anyone else. *shrug*
Anyway, I don't know how helpful that is, but at the very least you're not alone in tending to a serious writing voice. One good thing to keep in mind is a piece of advice Phobos and I got at our wedding: "Nothing is ever as serious as you think it is."
~Neshomeh