Skimming. A
writer’s nightmare. Here we are pouring intense thought and meticulous planning
into each layer and fold of our story... but the reader is getting antsy. And thus, missing the sheer genius of those carefully prepared words.
I hate to admit that I do this sometimes. Skim. A sacrilege! And I know that some poor misguided reader has likely glaze over those precious details I've slaved over to get to the meat.
Because I write suspense I tend to be driven by action, pacing,
and cliff hangers. But interestingly enough, I am equally wooed by the details,
the little nuances of romance that tease and excite until we are chomping at
the bit for more.
The point here is balance.
We’ve all been schooled with rulers to “show don’t tell,”
because well, a plainly told story would bore us all to tears. We want to
touch, taste, smell, see, and hear everything the characters are feeling
because therein lies the magic of story. It’s power to transport us outside of
ourselves into another dimension.
But sometimes, more
isn’t really better for the reader. The excess becomes clutter, it bogs our
pace, dwindles our excitement, and your beautiful message-your long labor of
love-becomes the casualty of overwriting.
To sound official I am going to coin this affliction Hyperwriteosis. Please consult your
editor if symptoms worsen.
Prescription to keep
you snappy (Use in moderation):
-Insert action tags to break up heavy introspection.
If we can see what is happening
outside of the mind, how the person responds physically, we are more inserted
into the moment and the scene has movement. Your page will have a pulse.
Susan May Warren does a great job
teaching about utilizing the five senses in every scene. If they are all
present, they almost disappear and the scene is alive all around you. But don’t
plop them all in at once because it becomes an information dump. And you don’t want your scene to read like a checklist.
Yep, she’s smells the dank air of the alley. The brisk wind shivers through her coat. It’s umm… dark, and the casts of shadows warn that she’s not alone. She can taste her own fear as nervous bile creeps up and spills onto the back of her tongue. And well, despite the cold, her fingers are slick with sweat. These are all great things to know, and each detail is a new smear of paint on your canvas, but I doubt your character notices them all at once so why paint like a three year old?
Yep, she’s smells the dank air of the alley. The brisk wind shivers through her coat. It’s umm… dark, and the casts of shadows warn that she’s not alone. She can taste her own fear as nervous bile creeps up and spills onto the back of her tongue. And well, despite the cold, her fingers are slick with sweat. These are all great things to know, and each detail is a new smear of paint on your canvas, but I doubt your character notices them all at once so why paint like a three year old?
-Write with
purpose.
Everything you plant on that page
needs to be a seed. Some thoughts are seedlings—little sprouts of insight into
your characters personality, their uniqueness, their setting, what makes them
tick. Other thoughts have roots that run deep under the foundation of your
story. They peel away motivations and fears. They raise the stakes and bring
the house down when we get hit with the black moment. Bam!
My point is, don’t waste your words of things that aren’t important to your story. The reader is smarter than you think and will not always be patient with your tangents. They will skip over your nonsense, or simply become annoyed by the delay, and forgo the rest of your fabulous book.
My point is, don’t waste your words of things that aren’t important to your story. The reader is smarter than you think and will not always be patient with your tangents. They will skip over your nonsense, or simply become annoyed by the delay, and forgo the rest of your fabulous book.
-Create
compelling characters.
Yes, this is fiction so we get to
play. We could technically sculpt some super fine hero with rock-hard abs and a smile dangerous
enough to be illegal in all 50 states. But we also want these people to seem
real. Beautifully flawed. We want to fight through their struggles alongside
them. Believe in them. Creating characters with honest vulnerability
can be a challenge. Sometimes it’s easier to write the uber-confident-smokin’-hot-bad-boy/nice-guy
that any woman would trade her left ovary to ride off with into the sunset with. But we don’t fall in love with cardboard cutouts. We fall
in love with wonderfully broken pieces of humanity that somehow fit with our
own. Make these people and their problems real and relate-able. Your reader will
swoon and will most definitely stay tuned.
-Write a chasing
pace.
It doesn’t have to have an actual
chase scene with explosions and tumbling cars to have a fast pace. It can be an
achingly slow and tender kiss scene that reads like a pedal to the metal ride on
the Autobahn. Keep your sentences short. Stay away from large blocks of script
or dialogue. And for me personally, puh-lease avoid reader uncertainty. Be clear about what
is happening. Okay, so what, they are kissing. Not all kisses are created
equal. If I am bored during a kiss scene you are missing the boat! Utilize
those senses; draw me in so I can see it play out like a scene from a movie. If
I don’t know where anyone’s hands are, what they are thinking, feeling, or even
if they are still kissing after an unspecified time elapses, am I to assume it
was a crusty peck kiss? Oh, that will win her over! You can be specific without
being graphic. Your reader will thank you! They will sigh and remember exactly
what it is like to be kissed senseless. Ow ow!
When do you feel you usually start skimming? And do you have
anything other remedies to add to my prescription?
<3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3
Amy Leigh Simpson writes romantic mysteries with honesty and humor, sweetness and spice, and gritty reality covered by grace. When she’s not stealing moments at naptime to squeeze out a few more adventures in storyland, she’s chasing around two tow-headed miscreants (Ahem)—boys, playing dress up with one sweet princess baby, and being the very blessed wife to the coolest, most swoon-worthy man alive. Amy is a Midwestern-girl, a singer, blogger, runner, coffee-addict, and foodie. Her Sports Medicine degree is wasted patching up daily boo boo’s, but whatever is left usually finds its way onto the page with fluttering hearts, blood and guts, and scars that lead to happily ever after.
Check out her NEW romantic mystery novel FROM WINTER'S ASHES! Available NOW!
<3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3 <3
Amy Leigh Simpson writes romantic mysteries with honesty and humor, sweetness and spice, and gritty reality covered by grace. When she’s not stealing moments at naptime to squeeze out a few more adventures in storyland, she’s chasing around two tow-headed miscreants (Ahem)—boys, playing dress up with one sweet princess baby, and being the very blessed wife to the coolest, most swoon-worthy man alive. Amy is a Midwestern-girl, a singer, blogger, runner, coffee-addict, and foodie. Her Sports Medicine degree is wasted patching up daily boo boo’s, but whatever is left usually finds its way onto the page with fluttering hearts, blood and guts, and scars that lead to happily ever after.
Check out her NEW romantic mystery novel FROM WINTER'S ASHES! Available NOW!