I have this thing about time.
My alarm is set for 5:41 a.m. (Sundays 7:53 a.m.). If recipe directions say bake for 25-30 minutes, Iโll pick 26, 27, 28, or 29โbut not 25 or 30โminutes.
When I warm my coffee in the microwave, I use one minute and two seconds.
Never, ever, do I set things for exactly on the hour or half hour.
Is that a quirk? I canโt explain it. But when Iโve tried to overcome it, I usually fail.
Quirks make characters memorable
We all have quirks. Iโm not talking about Monk-like OCD compulsions (I did love that show, however), but little idiosyncrasies that make us who we are.
Think about the character of Christopher Snow in Dean Koontzโ books Fear Nothing (1997) and Seize the Night (1998). Christopher has xeroderma pigmentosum, or XP, a rare genetic disorder that requires him to avoid ultraviolet light (daylight).
Not exactly a quirk, but throughout the novels Christopherโs condition creates, necessarily, interesting quirks that contribute to the booksโ plots in ways that would make the books impossible without them.
Another great example is the character of Uriah Heep in Charles Dickensโ David Copperfield. Heep was a greedy man whose quirk was rubbing his hands together as he spoke, as if gleefully anticipating how he was going to cheat someone. Or was he subconsciously wiping his hands of the dirty money he blackmails his boss for?
Character quirks (or hooks or tags) can make your characters more interesting, more memorable. Properly chosen (Uriah Heep), these personality ticks can reveal more than mere preferences and can provide critical plot points (Christopher Snow).
Up the tension or drama
In my current manuscript, one of the characters has a habit of clicking his ballpoint pen when heโs nervous. Okay, maybe not highly original or even all that unusual. But, in a key scene his quirk becomes a way to drive the scene and increase the pace to a frantic pitch.
Character quirks are another tool in your writerโs toolbox. Use them well and you can create a character, and a novel, for the ages. But beware of overindulging a quirkโtoo much and your character becomes a cartoon.
Consider
- Whatโs your favorite character quirk youโve created or read about? Why did it work so well?
- Was it merely for entertainment, or did the quirk run deeper?
- How could my quirk about time be used as something more in a manuscript?

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