During my (self-guided, self-nagged) courses in my âHomemade MFAâ I did many things: I read stacks of books, I read multiple favorite novels with an analytical eye, I participated in multiple writerâs groups and revised, revised, and then revised some more. And, I wrote âpapersâ for myself, in an attempt to distill down all the fantastic advice Iâd gleaned from those book stacks.
What I couldnât learn from the books was âvoice,â âpassionâ or âperseveranceâ â that required mining my own soul and level of commitment; what I could learn was those all important, and too often ignored, techniques that make oneâs prose more sophisticated. Gathering from all the sources I could find, I make my âCliff Notes for Fiction Techniquesâ otherwise known as Common Fiction Issues in Super-Short, Simplified Format.
Whatâs below isnât prettied up or served with garnish–itâs my original âjust the facts, mam.
1) Showing or telling? How much narrative summary do you have? Do you write âHe was fumingâ or âHe kicked the wall?â
âDon’t say the old lady screamed. Bring her on and let her scream.â Mark Twain
2)Â Characterization? Whatâs going on with your character? Can we see her worries, fears, and hopes? How many? We seldom feel one thing at a time. Have you tried a little tenderness? Shown the characters vulnerability? Readers like vulnerability, but beware showing pain laced with self-pity:Â readers dislike weakness and self-pity; show pain subtly and whenever possible, with humor.
Avoid thumbnails sketches and let character unfold before the reader. Donât define everything about them the moment they come on stage, start with a bit of looks, and let characterâs personality reveal the character, rather than relying on physical sketches. Watch âlooking in the mirrorâ descriptions. Have your characters misunderstand each other at times. Have them answer the unspoken question rather than the one asked aloud. Have them hedge, talk at cross-purposes, disagree, lie, sound human.
What does your character(s) want? Whatâs the obstacle to the want? What action has your character taken to overcome the obstacles? Are things too easy for your charactersâthus tamping down tension and conflict?
âReaders want to be haunted by charactersâ Jessica Morrell
3) Is your point of view pitch perfect? Keep the camera angle straight. Keep description and observation within characterâs point of view: is your Hellâs Angel guy describing the sunset too poetically? Nasty Jack rode along a sunshine drenched highway vs. Nasty Jack rode along the heat-choked highway.
4) Does your dialog hold interest and is it sophisticated? Dialogue: Watch tagging â use the invisible âsaidâ most often. Watch âlyâ adverbs or emotional attributions. Replace âDo you still love me?â Maria asked nervously with âYou still love me, right?â Maria gripped the steering wheel with both hands.
Could you use more contractions, more sentence fragments, and more run-on sentences? Is stiff dialog really exposition in disguise? Avoid dialect and weird spellings.
5) Do YEGO or MEGO? (Your/my eyes glaze over, courtesy of Stephen Koch, The Modern Library Writerâs Workshop.) Are you bored when reading any sections of your book? So is the reader.
6) Lost in interior monologue? Enough is enoughâis it getting self-indulgent? Sound like an essay? Or, conversely, do your clients move, move, move without any introspection?
“Stick to the point.” W. Somerset Maugham             Â
 7) Do you have stage business: donât forget the little bits of action interspersed through a scene. Avoid repetitive stage business. (Always drinking or smoking?) Do they illuminate your character? Are they particular to him/her? Do they fit the rhythm of dialog?
8) Can you judge anything through the white space? Enough? Too much? Are your characters making speeches rather than speaking?9) Did you repeat? Watch repetitive action, characters, emotions, etc. Readers donât need sledgehammers.
10) How the proportion? Watch the blow by blow. Donât lose drive. Your interest/hobby/knowledge isnât fascinating to everyone. Too many flashbacks rob narrative drive.
âThe secret to being tiresome is to tell everything.â Voltaire
11) Is your writing sophisticated or amateur? Janet Burroway writes in A Guide to Narrative Craft:
âJohn Gardner says in addition to the fault of insufficient details and excessive use of abstraction there is a third failure: ââ¦the needless filtering of the image through some observing consciousness. The amateur writes: Turning she noticed two snakes fighting in among the rocks. Compare: She turned. In among the rocks, two snakes were fighting. Generally speaking–though no laws are absolute in fictionâvividness urges that almost every occurrence of such phrases as âshe noticedâ and âshe sawâ be suppressed in favor of direct presentation of the thing seen.â
The filter is a common fault and often difficult to recognizeâalthough once the principle is grasped, cutting away filters is an easy means to more vivid writing. As a fiction writer you will often be working through âsome observing consciousness.â Yet, when you step back and ask readers to observe the observer, to look at, rather than through the characterâyou start to tell, not show, and rip us briefly out of the scene.â
Watch simplicity, construction and linking verbs (fought as opposed to were fighting.) a) Maria swore at Joe as she tore off her shirt vs. As Maria was ripping off her shirt she angrily flung swears at Joe. b) Maria slammed her cup on the counter vs. Hating Jim, Maria viciously set her cup on the counter.
Sentence choppy? Too short? Overly-said-killing-the-point-long? Leaning on Italics? Or explanation points! Flowery descriptions everywhere? Sex not leaving enough to the imagination? Are you making it into a manual? Too much profanity? Are your starting sentences with when, suddenly and then? Did Maria nod her head? Have Maria nod. Did Maria sit down on the bed? Have Maria sit on the bed.
âOmit needless words.â Stunk and White
12) Always sure of your setting? Where are your characters? Is it hot? Cold? What month? School in session? Summer vacation? Holidays coming? Orient the reader.
“If it sounds like writing, I rewrite it.â Elmore Leonard
13) Have enough details? What are they wearing? Look up, look down: shoes, hair (messy, neat?) what are they sitting on? Nails bitten? Polished? Desk messy or neat? Any dust on the dresser?
14) Avoiding passive construction. Is your voice active? Does enough happen in scene? Are you overusing âwas,â leading to the dreaded passive voice? Maria spilled the milk as opposed to the passive voice: The milk was spilled by Maria.
15) Explaining too much? Resist the urge to tell the reader what is funny, what is sad, etc. If you think itâs unclear, rewrite, donât explain.
âStorytelling reveals meaning without committing the error of defining itâ Hannah Arendt
16) Have you checked your sentence mechanics: Do you have a changing rhythm of short and long sentences? Does your sentence begin or end with the drama? A) The stolen diamonds were in Mariaâs purse. Or: B) Mariaâs purse held the stolen diamonds. Howâs your grammar?
âClarity. Clarity. Clarity.
When you become hopelessly mired in a sentence,
it is best to start fresh.” Strunk & White
17) Are your tics showing? All of us have writing ticsâdiscover yours or have someone point them out (If I let them, all my characters will lean toward the other characters during times of stress) and remove most of them,
18) Have you balanced scenes and sequels? Can you feel a good rhythm of active scenes vs. reflective sequels? (Scene: Maria stole the diamonds. Sequel: Maria googled âarrestâ to determine her chances of doing time.
19) Transitions clear and smooth? Are you moving the reader through time? Sliding effortlessly into flashback? Showing setting changes? Showing changes in mood, tone, emotion, weather, and POV? Are transition sentences performing double duty?
Examples of transition sentences: James arrived on drizzly evening with an envelope in the pocket of his jeans. âI got rejected at Putnamâsâ he said when she opened the door. From Rosie by Anne Lamott.
20) Descriptions: Characters & More: Watch out for the ubiquitous âlooking in the mirrorâ descriptions. Donât rely on the âhair, eyes, heightâ character picture. Rather than writing how beautiful Elisha had tumbling red lock spilling over her shoulder, sparkling green eyes and towered over most of her coworkers, try Elisha towered over her coworkers in a manner reminiscent of a supermodel crossed with scariest grade school teacher.
Similarly, when describing settings and objects, less is more. Think of how combining too many colors can lead to a muddy picture. The same happens with an overuse of descriptive words: the reader is left trying to build the scene/character and is no longer lost in your world.
âTo write simply is as difficult as to be good.â Somerset Maugham
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