Entries tagged with “description”.


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Sometimes the details can captivate. A few days ago, I said that too much description from the narrator can be a bad thing, and now I’m saying a lot of extra unnecessary details can make for a good story. In both posts I want to get across that the delivery is what is important.

If the details speak to the type of character, you can likely give superfluous details without boring the reader.

What if we try something like this?

I am sitting with James before the meeting. He can’t stop talking about Christina and how beautiful she is. I have never met her before, but the thought of meeting this young, beautiful woman is very enticing.

In the meeting, I sit directly across from her. She has beautiful crystal blue eyes and light brown hair. Her skin is pale, lips and breast are full, and she is in great shape. I want her, bad. She slides her hands across the keyboard. Oh gawd. Her hands; they are hideous. She has ugly fingers, and her nails are bent, broken, misshapen, and discolored.

I can barely look in her direction. The ugly from her hands is creeping up her wrists, through her arms, and all over her body. It is like an infection, visibly moving up a vain, directly to the heart and through the body, until the pretty is entirely dead. Who could ever find her attractive with nails like that?

Your narrator, who is a part of this story, is instantly struck by the beauty of this young woman in his presence, a woman that is considered beautiful by other people. He gets really hung up on her unhealthy nails. This should be a minor issue, so it really speaks to our narrator’s mindset. With these details, I have attempted to show a character who has hang ups. Our narrator hasn’t just given details about a woman. If the woman had unhealthy nails, it wouldn’t matter. The bad nails only matter because of the insight we get into the narrator’s character.

What are your thoughts?

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I find that too much description in a novel is boring as hell. It can be very important for an author to let you know the specifics. So, what do you do if you need to let the reader know that Sam the janitor has a beard, long hair, blue eyes, and thick bushy eyebrows? My preference is to allow characters to reveal information about themselves and other characters, but I often see the narrator tirelessly giving lines and lines of details without any character conversation.

What if we did something like this?

Shawn and Jessica are chatting by the lockers outside of the gym as Sam the janitor walks by.

“Look at him Jes! He is so weird, with his beard and long hair.”

“I don’t know. He’s kinda cute, and he just looks so honest and kind.”

“Are you kidding? Look at his thick serial killer eyebrows. You can’t trust anyone with eyebrows like that.”

“No, no. Shawn, look at him. Look at his big, beautiful, piercing blue eyes.”

Some people might argue that this does not give an adequate description. Maybe the reader wants to know that the eyebrows are one whole inch tall, and the length of the eyebrow hair is actually one inch long as well. My feeling is that since thick eyebrows are subjective, why not let the reader imagine how thick those eyebrows are. Instead of wasting lines of narrative description on Sam the janitor, we have managed to build two characters and describe a third.

What are you thoughts?

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