Jennifer talks about leaving clues...
When you think of your writing, think of it like ice cream.
Any flavor will do—of course, I prefer chocolate, but you’re free to be wrong
;)—because for this lesson, the ice cream is less important than the topping.
Specifically, sprinkles.
If your ice cream represents your plot, the sprinkles
represent the clues you want to give the reader throughout your story. Those
clues could be backstory, hints at motivation, actual clues to a mystery or
even evidence of your character arc.
The point is, you want them distributed throughout your
story—like sprinkles on ice cream—rather than clumped or bunched in one place.
In my current WIP, my hero was formerly addicted to
painkillers. He solved his problem on his own, which means he doesn’t really
understand what addiction is. Now, he confuses addiction to drugs with his
desire to be with the heroine. Because he never wants to be addicted to
anything again, he breaks up with the heroine and it isn’t until he gets help
for his former addiction that he learns the difference. In order to show all of
this believably, I have to sprinkle in throughout the story examples of how he
cuts himself off from anything he becomes too attached to—whether it’s a
favorite food, an activity or ultimately, the heroine. If I don’t, the reader
won’t understand and won’t see the pattern.
So what about you? Do you just sprinkle backstory or are
there other things you sprinkle throughout your book?