Who’s Going to Help Your Hero?

By Jim Dempsey  |  August 24, 2018  | 

I just had my in-laws staying. For seven weeks! Don’t get me wrong, they’re nice, easy-going people (at least, they kept telling me so), but I reckon Ghandi could test your patience after seven weeks in your spare room.

There was no one thing they did to annoy me (OK, there was one thing: “The car had an accident,” said Pops. It wasn’t him. It was the car.) It was all the little irks and ticks that built up over the time. And it was a long time. Seven weeks. Did I mention that already?

By the final week, I was frazzled. And my wife was away on business, leaving me to deal with them on my own. It came to a head one evening when I had to ask Mom, again, not to snap the spine of my paperbacks when reading them (“But it’s so much easier to hold in one hand.”)

I had to talk to someone. I had to get it all off my chest. But it was 11pm, who could I call? My wife’s days were full with meetings and preparing for meetings and, anyway, I’d just be moaning again if I called her. Who else then? Who could I call at that time of night to sound off?

It’s at these moments you realize the kind of support network you have. It’s a special kind of someone who’ll take that kind of call at that time of night and still give the level of sympathy you’re looking for.

There will be times in your story, too, when your protagonist needs support. And it’s not always obvious where that support will come from. Sometimes you have to dig deep to find that secondary character who will step in to save your hero just at the right time.

These moments usually come at the end of the second act in any story, when it looks like your hero has lost everything, with no chance of ever reaching the goal. Joseph Campbell called this moment “rescue from without” in his description of the seventeen steps in a hero’s journey, where the help had to come from somewhere other than the hero. But heroes need help throughout a story, and they could need support at any time.

Secondary support

The trick is to find exactly the right person, the one secondary character who can provide the right kind of support at exactly the right moment. Sometimes the answer is obvious, but sometimes you need to look hard to find that perfect helping hand. And bringing that assistance from somewhere unexpected can help to surprise the reader and add an extra twist to your story.

Just remember not to make it too much of a surprise. Help should come from somewhere that makes sense in the narrative. Readers hate nothing more than a story solution that comes from nowhere (well, they might hate seven weeks with their in-laws more, but you get the point). Try to avoid any deus ex machina type endings.

One way to find the right person for that perfect moment is to make a list of secondary characters and how they relate to the hero. This task may sound a little laborious, but it’s well worth the effort.

Start with a list of all your secondary characters, and don’t just include those who are obvious allies of your hero, add them all.

In a column next to that, rate each of those characters on how close they are to the hero or, more accurately, how close the hero feels to those characters. Rate them from 0 to 10, with 10 being very close.

In a third column, write the kind of support they could provide to your character. It could be financial, emotional, physical, spiritual, intellectual, or any other kind of support. Jot down a word or two to remind yourself of the kind of support this character can offer. You can make it specific to your particular story, so you could write down: sword, potions, spells, etc. Or: unconditional love, friendship, a full wine cellar. Whatever works best for you.

In the final column, consider the problem your hero faces. In my case, I had to find someone I could call late at night, someone who’d provide a sympathetic ear. My wife might have scored higher in closeness (column 2) and the kind of support she could give (column 3), but I had to rule her out at that moment. So, add quick notes or just words to column 4 to outline the reasons why, or why not, this character could provide support in this situation.

From here you’ll have a good overview of the potential sources of help your hero could get, and you should be able to spot the perfect person pretty quickly.

Working through this exercise helps you to build up a picture of your main character’s support network, who is going to help them out in a crisis and the kind of help they can give. You can use it as a reference to come back to whenever you back your hero into a corner (always good for adding suspense to the narrative) but don’t quite know how to get them out again.

And, just in case you’re wondering, I called another in-law to talk about my problem, my wife’s sister’s husband; he knew exactly what I was talking about.

Who supports your hero? Did the support come from an unexpected source? Would you like to sound off about your in-laws too? Let me know in the comments, maybe we can start a support group.

10 Comments

  1. Anna on August 24, 2018 at 10:35 am

    I’m toying with idea of support coming from my most unsympathetic character, perhaps inadvertently. This is a vague question, I realize, but it would be nice to hear your opinion.

    (Inlaws: mine went to their reward many years ago, so this is an old story. The only times I’ve ever consumed alcohol to excess, very deliberately, was during visits to them. The need was great and the booze was free.)



    • Jim Dempsey on August 24, 2018 at 12:13 pm

      I like the idea of the most unsympathetic character providing support. It will have that element of surprise, the unexpected, that (almost) always works well for a story. And that it happens inadvertently sounds like it will come as part of the natural narrative flow and not out the blue. Certainly worth trying to see if it works.

      In-laws with lots of free booze could certainly help make that relationship way more tolerable.

      Thanks for sharing, Anna. Good luck with your novel.

      Jim



  2. Maggie Smith on August 24, 2018 at 10:56 am

    I’m still stuck back on why your wife left for seven weeks right when her mother and father were coming to visit. That’s a story right there.



    • Jim Dempsey on August 24, 2018 at 12:03 pm

      Ha ha. :) True, that could be a story, but I guess the simple answer is that she knows them better than I do, and is a better forward planner than me.



  3. Beth Havey on August 24, 2018 at 2:47 pm

    Thanks, Jim. In my current WIP my heroine does get help from an unexpected source and she learns to see value in a person she once discounted. CHANGE is always part of life and should be on the page.



    • Jim Dempsey on August 25, 2018 at 10:12 am

      And stories are all about change. Sounds like your WIP is in pretty good shape already. Good luck with it, Beth.



  4. J on August 24, 2018 at 5:04 pm

    At one point in my story I realised my hero would get help from someone I had only mentioned very briefly before. I think I was as surprised as my hero :-) But looking back it all made sense, at least to me … and my hero – I hope it will make sense to the readers too. (Ok, I did plant a little extra foreshadowing, just to be sure.)
    – As for in-laws: seven weeks is heroic!! I think I draw the line at one week already – for them being at our place as well as the other way round. (And mine are rather easy-going too…)



    • Jim Dempsey on August 25, 2018 at 10:21 am

      It’s great when you surprise yourself with story twists. I’m curious to know how much of a surprise it will be on your next read through of the story, or whether you’ll see that foreshadowing as an obvious spoiler now that you know what happens. I think that shift in perspective when you read your own stories is fascinatiing, although not always useful in these instances as it can sow those seeds of doubt: too much foreshadowing? Not enough? Usually your first instinct is right though.

      All the best with it.

      Jim



  5. Deborah Makarios on August 25, 2018 at 12:14 am

    Snapped the spines of your paperbacks??? If anyone tries that in my house, their life will be short and their death will be long. If you’re a proper reader, you can hold a paperback one-handed without damaging it, and if you’re not a proper reader, you can survive without access to my books!



    • Jim Dempsey on August 25, 2018 at 10:25 am

      Thank you, Deborah. Now I’ve got a snappy comeback for next time. What am I saying? Next time? I don’t even want to think about that just yet.