Writers Tricks of the Trade Volume 5, Issue 5 | Page 26
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8 REASONS AND WAYS TO
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WORK WITH EMOTION
MORGAN ST. JAMES
1. MAKE A FICTIONAL CHARACTER SEEM REAL TO THE READER.
Forget just stringing together a series of words describing physical attributes and
how the character carries out routine or off-the-chart situations—perhaps spiced
with inner thoughts. There is more to creating someone with feelings and
emotions and a physical presence. Doing that doesn’t have to be daunting.
Because the reader sees events through the eyes of these players in the story, at
all costs avoid moving paper dolls or overblown figures through the scenes.
2. PUT LIFE INTO PHYSICAL DESCRIPTIONS
This is a place where adjectives, adverbs, similes and metaphors are your friends
as long as they aren’t overused. Sprinkling them in the right places sparks the
reader’s imagination. It allows them to draw parallels to familiar images and see
them in their mind’s eye. Overuse them, however, and it minimizes everything.
Why? Because with each new spouting of a simile, metaphor or more adjectives
or adverbs than should ever be huddled together in the same sentence, the
reader begins wonder how many more of these they can endure.
3. TAP INTO YOUR OWN IMPRESSIONS RATHER THAN USING CLICHÉS
To avoid clichés, reach into your own experiences and picture things that
impressed you. Put the image into words and apply it to something about your
character. For example, the woman had shining blonde hair. If it was straight, did
it just hang there or shimmer like a golden shawl?
Why would I choose the simile of a golden shawl for this example? Because I
pictured a former business partner and friend who had hair like that. I could
never look at her without thinking of a golden silk shawl. Let’s say the hair isn’t
straight, but curly. Is it in tight ringlets perhaps described as coiled little ringlets
like the fur on a pampered poodle? Maybe this blonde hair undulates in luxurious
waves reminiscent of waves kissed by the glow of the sun as they push toward
shore.
In each of these examples we picture a different person. And, every reader will
have their unique vision of that person. Simply saying “her straight blonde hair”
or “curly blonde hair” would never launch imagination in the same way.
4. CREATE YOUR OWN REFERENCE FILE
So often these images are fleeting, triggered by something someone said,
something we remembered or saw, but even with Herculean effort, we can’t pull
them back when we need them. They lurk right at the edge of recognition, then
slip away. One way to capture them is to keep a log. When an image like that
pops into your mind, distinct images and emotions ride on their coattails, leaving
you with a describable impression. Reach for the little spiral notebook—we
SEPT - OCTOBER 2015
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