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#AuthorToolboxBlogHop: How to Write Addiction in Fiction

20th September 2017 By Shah Wharton 18 Comments

The #AuthorToolboxBlogHop is a monthly event on the topic of resources and learning for authors. Feel free to hop around to the various blogs and see what you learn! The rules and sign-up form are below the list of hop participants. All authors at all stages of their careers are welcome to join.

To continue hopping through other great blogs in the monthly #AuthorToolboxBlogHop or to join, click here.

For those who don't know...
It is great to be part of this blog hop, where I hope to impart lessons I have learned over the past five or so years of working as a ghostwriter and writing my own, usually dark fiction. I’m also learning so much from the MA Creative Writing I’m currently studying, so I will be keen to share tips from the classroom, covering Creative Nonfiction (CN), 21st Century Poetry, Fiction, and Reading into Writing. Above all, I’m excited to learn from all of your vast and varied experiences. 🙂

Today, I’m sharing a guest post! 🙂 Bill Weiss uses his website– unitingrecovery.com —to sheds light on addiction, offering people the resources to learn more about the disease of addiction. I asked him to write an informative post about how we, as fiction writers, might correctly write about characters battling with addiction, so he did! Take it away, Bill!


Writing takes a lot of time and dedication as it is, so writing about a touchy subject is especially difficult. Though addiction is a common theme in many storylines, it is not uncommon for authors to make a few mistakes when tackling this sensitive subject. Read on for tips about writing addiction in fiction.

1. Avoid Clichés

The very idea of an addict conjures up images of a person down on their luck, struggling to stay alive and maybe even stealing from family and friends. Though these things may be true for many addicts, they are often overplayed in movies and fiction novels. They are also incredibly misinformed about the other side of addiction that quietly hides in suburbia.

In order to avoid clichés, consider what details make up an addict. Understand how a person might ask himself, “Am I an addict?” even though he or she might be living an otherwise successful life. Don’t focus on the dirtiest details of addiction at the expense of connecting with a wider audience.

Instead, focus on some aspect of addiction that you haven’t read about. What does the addicted person do for money if they don’t decide to steal and sell valuables? Does the addicted person ever have sobering moments when he or she feels ashamed of the addictive behaviors? Imagine such moments and write about them.

2. Make the Character Sympathetic

Creating a character who battle addiction might mean daring to write hairy details about someone with an obvious flaw. However, one tricky thing about writing addiction is that some readers might carry judgements regarding addiction that can get in the way of them truly bonding with the character. You want to give your characters flaws but also make them seem like real human beings.

Balance their flaws by giving them some good qualities, too. Is your addicted character riotously funny? Does he or she have a past to overcome? These details are crucially important to understand addiction as most recovering addicts focus on past trauma and improving self-esteem during recovery. The more human characteristics that you can assign to your character, the more sympathetic the character will become to your reader. Sympathetic characters are the ones we remember best and they are the ones that keep us turning the pages.

3. Reveal the Addiction Through the Character’s Actions

Telling the reader that your character is an addict is not nearly as convincing as showing them. For instance, if you state that your character has a meth addiction, but this addiction never causes any problems or consequences for your character, then you haven’t painted a very clear picture of what being an addict truly means.

A better way to tell your character’s story would be to allow her to suffer. Show the reader the painful reality of struggling with addiction. Does she struggle to complete simple, everyday tasks? How does this make her feel? Where does the reader see her behaving differently than someone without an addiction

You also lose credibility if you make life too easy for your addicted characters. Sending your character to therapy and curing her from her addiction without illustrating that addiction is a lifelong struggle robs your reader of taking the journey with her. Because addiction creates problems that last a lifetime, it’s okay to make her fail at her first attempts to get help. Maybe she is not even on the path to recovery by the end of your story.

Telling a story without adding details about the addiction will also make the story bland and less memorable. Think about the everyday tasks you perform–going to work, cooking dinner and spending time with family. How might these tasks be different for an addict? For instance, an addict might worry about keeping secrets from her family, or she might have a strong urge to satisfy her addiction while in a public place.

4. Do Your Research

While many authors do well by writing from personal experience, you do not need to be an addict to write about one. First, you must understand the basic disease model of addiction. Understand the way it touches every aspect of life and the way addiction locks the addict into a never-ending circle of cravings and relapse.

Next, take the time to understand the differences between substances and their effects. For instance, a methamphetamine addict might have a noticeably different appearance than that of a cocaine addict. Meth addicts sometimes suffer from hallucinations that cause them to feel critters crawling on their skin. The imagined presence of these critters causes meth addicts to scratch their skin, which creates scabs and blisters. Adding little details, such as this one, to your story can make the character come alive. It will also add credibility to your story.

Writing a good fiction story about addiction may feel like a daunting task. However, you can do it. Consider the above tips. Research the addiction you’re writing about and add details about the addiction in your story. Be sure that your character is sympathetic by giving them both flaws and strengths, and make an effort to avoid common clichés concerning addiction. Following these tips will help you make your fiction story believable, credible and interesting.

If this topic interests you, take advantage of Bill’s links provided and, of course his blog. Thanks, Bill!

Filed Under: #AuthorToolboxBlogHop, Books and Authors, Careers In Writing, Good Books To Read, Guest Post, Mental Health, Mental Muse, My Writing, Writing, Writing Tips Tagged With: #amwriting, #AuthorToolboxBlogHop, Addiction, writing advice

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Comments

  1. Dianna Gunn says

    20th September 2017 at 1:28 am

    Excellent advice! Most of my main characters struggle with mental illness, often PTSD, and this advice can also easily be applied to those characters.

    Reply
    • Shah Wharton says

      26th September 2017 at 12:05 pm

      Mine are too, Dianna. I find the psychology of dark characters (or characters with dark issues) far more interesting.

      Reply
  2. raimeygallant says

    20th September 2017 at 3:41 am

    Yeesh. What a fantastic post. I’m going to admit this here and nowhere else, but it bothers me when people reviewing books with characters with addiction say they don’t like the character with the addiction. I could probably word this better. Anyway, in particular, I’m tired of people panning The Girl on the Train because, in their opinion, Rachel is unlikable. Society has a long way to go on eliminating stigma surrounding addiction. This said, I agree that authors, when writing addiction, have bear responsibility that encompasses everything said in this post.

    Reply
    • Shah Wharton says

      26th September 2017 at 12:04 pm

      I agree. Nothings’ worse when a character has an addiction but falls in love and miraculously stops being an addict. Like it’s that easy. Like all we need is love (that’s a song, not reality). Support helps, of course, but it’s not enough on its own. And addicts are difficult to love because they may steal and lie, but they do so for their addiction. I loathed my father on and off for years but never stopped loving him because I understood why he behaved they way he did.

      Reply
  3. Iola Goulton (@IolaGoulton) says

    20th September 2017 at 10:19 am

    Great post! I haven’t got any characters with addictions (coffee and Facebook don’t count, right?), but these are great tips for developing authentic characters with problems.

    I haven’t yet read The Girl on the Train …

    Reply
    • Shah Wharton says

      26th September 2017 at 12:00 pm

      The Girl on the Train is worth a read (or catch the move) 🙂 Addiction is a dark subject which won’t fit with many genres.

      Reply
  4. Erika Beebe says

    20th September 2017 at 5:46 pm

    Very timely for me. I’ll be writing about a character with the popular addictions and reflecting on the changes of each one through his life. Thank you. I haven’t read Girl on the Train either. 🙂

    Reply
    • Shah Wharton says

      26th September 2017 at 11:58 am

      Girl on the Train focusses expertly on alcoholism–one of the most prevalent addictions and dangerous to detox from. Good luck with the story.

      Reply
  5. emaginette says

    20th September 2017 at 6:15 pm

    The biggest thing I noticed about meth addicts is their missing teeth. They might have kicked it but the teeth don’t grow back. Finding the money to fix them can be near impossible. Sad after such a hard battle.

    Anna from elements of emaginette

    Reply
    • Shah Wharton says

      26th September 2017 at 11:56 am

      Lost or brown and rotting teeth, cysts and potted skin. Addiction is not pretty any way you look at it.

      Reply
  6. Alex J. Cavanaugh (@AlexJCavanaugh) says

    20th September 2017 at 7:25 pm

    Research is definitely important. Talking to someone who struggled and is willing to share would give you a real idea of what happens and how they feel and react.

    Reply
    • Shah Wharton says

      26th September 2017 at 11:55 am

      Indeed, Alex.

      Reply
  7. Kristina Stanley says

    20th September 2017 at 11:09 pm

    I write mysteries around skiing and sailing, both topics I love to research personally. I can’t imagine I’d want to have personal experience with addiction just to write it well. 🙂 Great advice you’ve given here.

    Reply
    • Shah Wharton says

      26th September 2017 at 11:54 am

      My father was addicted to heroine for all my life until he died so no, addiction is no fun. Far from it. This kind of info offers tips for those lucky enough to remain unaffected.

      Reply
  8. Victoria Marie Lees says

    20th September 2017 at 11:37 pm

    This is my first time here, Shah. I’ll follow your blog and connect with you online. Wow! No I didn’t know this stuff about addiction. Thanks for sharing this with Author Toolbox followers. Good luck with your Masters studies.
    Victoria Marie Lees, http://victoriamarielees.blogspot.com

    Reply
    • Shah Wharton says

      26th September 2017 at 11:52 am

      Oh, that’s brilliant news. Thanks for your support Victoria.

      Reply
  9. Mica Scotti Kole says

    21st September 2017 at 1:29 am

    Similar rules are true in so many cases (especially with showing and telling). I for one would like to see more addicts in books that were relatable. I recall the real-life addict in The Glass Castle (I don’t think he ever kicked the habit, either) – and he was lovable and you really felt for him at the same time that you saw his flaws. So much more powerful than a trope.

    Reply
    • Shah Wharton says

      26th September 2017 at 11:51 am

      I agree, Mica. Psychology of characters is deeply interesting to me.

      Reply

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