Imagining how others feel helps you to connect with them any time, not just for imaginary characters! Try it sometimes when you are faced with a difficult real-life person and see how much easier it is to understand them. Understanding people automatically makes you more interested in anything, including a story.
i think its what the characters feel in the story.... :)
A.ture
Yes, I feel sympathy for some of the other characters in the story. They all face their own struggles and challenges, and their actions and decisions are often shaped by their own experiences and circumstances. It is important to consider their perspectives and motivations when looking at the story as a whole.
My recommendation for creating tension in a story, would be to add some sort of mystery that separates two different characters because of how different those two characters' ideas and opinions are. If you feel tension in the story, then your readers are bound to feel it too if you wrote it correctly.
I feel awesome. imagining if one day when I'm older getting marry with him.
Dialogue between characters
When the characters talk to each other or to themselves. "Hello Odephius" "Hello stranger. May I feel your face."
A story "board" is a visual representation of what the characters will look like and what the major plot lines will be. It is sometimes done in sketches by the artist with a comic book feel to it..
As you read, you should be asking yourself questions about the plot:What is happening?Where and when is it happening?Why is it happening?Who is it happening to?
The story the outsiders is effective in a way where it only tells the way he feels. The point of view should change by also stating how the other characters feel in the story.
Authors use as many main characters as they feel that they need in order to tell their story. This can be anything from one character to an entire group. The purpose is to tell the story the way the author wants it told.
omniscient; limited