I've used humor to do all of these, as a political cartoonist, arts-and-entertainment writer, consumer columnist, and a writer of a variety of books for kids and teens: everything from funny picture books and illustrated novels for middle graders to an epic fantasy about a magical storyteller, a romantic YA ghost story, and a novel about a super geek turned into a reluctant vampire.
To do this, I used a formula that I invented during the seven years I was a political cartoonist. Back then, I had to come up with four to eight cartoons a week--usually written on the same day, so my cartoons would be timely. Since then, this formula has not only helped me add humor to my writing; it's helped me come up with an endless supply of story ideas.
So how does it work?
Shevi’s House of Funny formula for creating humor
The House of Funny formula is comprised of three Ss:
Setup+Surprise+Sense=Humor
The setup can be anything you want to be. In this case, it's whatever you want to make funny or add humor to. The setup creates an expectation, and the surprise comes from taking the setup in a completely unexpected direction.
Therefore, if you want to add humor to your writing, you have to work out what the reader will expect--and then you have to take your story in a completely different, unexpected direction. Not only will this add humor to your writing--it will let you create something that stands out from the crowd, something unexpected and new, something readers haven’t seen before. It will give your writing the "Wow" factor everyone is looking for.
Will any kind of surprise do?
Of course, some audiences have a much higher pain threshold than others, so you have to know your audience. Will they be surprised by your surprise, able to make sense of your logic, and accept any pain that may be a part of your joke? If so, you have all the ingredients for humor.
So how do I creates that surprise?
Great question! I'm glad you asked. (Okay, technically I'm the one who asked. But it's still a great question.) The answer is rather complicated, so we’ll be looking at that in my next blog post.
5 comments:
What an awesome series. Love that you're sharing this.
I like to use humour to make an otherwise disgusting character sympathetic.
Wagging Tales - Blog for Writers
Looking forward to part 2!
Oh, yes, Charmaine, I forgot about that. Humor really is a multifunctional tool.
Billy, you won't have to wait long. Part 2 should be up later today.
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