Emily’s Blog

A selection of Emily’s thoughts, interviews, and video links…

Emily Inkpen Emily Inkpen

Female Characters in Crisis - Things to Remember

The world is ending. Again. So what role do your female characters play in a crisis and how can you avoid one of the most common male-written pitfalls out there? Once you read this, you will see it over and over again in movies and serialised dramas. It’s so prevalent it’s almost standard… and it’s about as far from reality as it’s possible to be.

I’m talking about the moment in the story when the woman looks at the man and asks… 

“What are we going to do?!”

Read More
Emily Inkpen Emily Inkpen

How Women React to Men: Female Characters - Things to Remember

Gents, in this series I’ve been providing non-judgemental tips and tricks to ensure your female characters score highly on depth and integrity.

This time I’m looking at the subject of how women view men, the things we notice and the thoughts we have but don’t necessarily verbalise. If you’re writing from a female perspective you may struggle to inject these realistic focal points. This is totally understandable… and fixable…

Read More
Emily Inkpen Emily Inkpen

Writing Female Villains - Things to Remember

It’s understandable when tired tropes find their way into your writing, but there are good reasons to be aware of them. Introducing nuance to your villainous women will help you to give your writing credibility while maintaining your female readership. It’s all about integrity, which is something most, if not all, writers aspire to.

Read More
Emily Inkpen Emily Inkpen

Writing Female Characters - Things to Remember

I see a lot of posts highlighting examples of male writers getting descriptions of female characters wrong. Of male writers falling back on tired sexist tropes that place women as props in the male MC’s storyline. But in a world where it’s quite possible to read works only written by men… and I must stress here the importance of diversifying if you haven’t already… it can be difficult to know how NOT to do those things.

Read More
Emily Inkpen Emily Inkpen

Why Trauma MUST be Recognised in Character-Driven Narratives

TW - violence in narrative including killing, dying, sexual assault, loss

In a previous blog post I talked about how character actions should be supported by an appropriate amount of context. i.e.:

Is the context of X and Y enough to plausibly support the action of Z?


In this blog, I’m going to address how some contexts require a reaction:

Is the context of X and Y plausible without the reaction of Z?

Read More