Right, so don't get all huffy and storm off in a strop, have a paddy or throw your dummy out the pram. This
rule was made eons ago and has recently gained crazy momentum for a reason. And
no, it's not to ruin your writing, or
make it sound like everyone else's, or suck out all the fun, or hinder your
natural voice. Goodness no. This rule does the opposite when used to its maximum.
Exploit the 'show, don't tell' rule and your characters will come alive, your
talent will explode on the page, your action will be vivid and your voice
addictive. It's true.
I am sure you are SICK of hearing it, but I'm sorry, guys,
it's still one of the biggest issues I see in manuscripts I'm given to edit.
It's a freaking epidemic. I know, I know. You're telling a story, but 'telling'
in this sentence doesn't need to be taken literally. Think of your writing as
entertaining your audience, creating a movie reel in their heads, creating
images and evoking emotions through your cleverly constructed sentences and precise
wording. Not simply relaying what happened one word at a time. Oh no, you want
more. Much more. You want to pick up your reader and plonk them in this story:
hurt them in fight scenes, reduce them to tears in sad scenes, scare the
heebie-jeebies out of them in frightening ones. Let them be the characters. Let
them feel, hear, smell, touch. Clench their fists, grit their teeth, suppress
tears, and eyeball the shadowed corners of the room.
I'll admit, it is very possible the writing world has gone a
little 'show, don't tell' mental, but in this case, we're actually talking
about a picnic that seriously needs this sandwich. (Stick with me...) Good
books do more than tell stories, as good sandwiches do more than satisfy
hunger. But it's OK sometimes to tell, it truly is. But sometimes means rarely,
as little as you possibly can. Perhaps in those scenes that are fast and
furious dabbling with elaborate phrasing isn't needed because you've just got
to get that action across before it's too late. Fine. No one is going to tell
you off. Absolutely not. But if you do this on every page, in every sentence
and every scene, then your reader's likely to switch off, or literally do this...
So, are you telling me, or are you showing me? T = Telling
and S = Showing
Setting
T: Home was a big town called Tonbridge and the roads were red
and the sky was purple.
S: Billy stood staring out at the vastness of Tonbridge. His
birth place. Home. Red bricked roads twisted amongst metallic skyscrapers, the
swirling purple clouds reflected in the tops.
Emotion
T: Billy was excited because he'd arrived and was going to
meet his parents for the first time.
S: Billy sucked in a long, calming breath. He was here. At
last. He smiled, unable to fight his emotions any longer. Somewhere, amongst
the skyscrapers, were his parents. Mum and Dad. And he was finally going to meet
them.
With Filter Verbs
T: Billy could hear water, which appeared to be coming from
around the corner. He decided to investigate.
S: Billy paused, listening. A gentle trickling of water. But
where? He focused, homing in on the sound. To his right, just through the
trees. But it couldn't be, could it? Real water? He jumped down from the mound
and crept closer.
Characterisation
T: Billy was an angry guy who found it hard to forgive.
S: Billy gritted his teeth and snarled at all the smiling
faces ahead of him. Stupid happy families. He didn't need parents, not like
these fools. And besides, istwasn't him who'd walked out all those year ago.
With Adverbs
T: Billy quickly ran to his parents, and excitedly hugged
them.
S: Billy sprinted across the park and, unable to hold back
his emotions any longer, threw his arms around his parents and squeezed.
There are other ways I often see writers telling instead of
showing – info-dumping and conveniently passing on info through dialogue, for
example – but these five examples are the most common. And if you work on these
techniques, practise, research, read, learn, then your writing will immediately
take a more professional turn. Just try it before you refuse to follow the
'show, don't tell' crowd –because I hear and see your reluctance – and if you
still think your writing was better before, then I wish you all the best.
Yes!
ReplyDeleteHell yeah!
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