Showing posts with label rich details. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rich details. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

The Telling Detail

Some authors have the uncanny ability to bring their novels to life using rich, telling details.

I'm not talking about using heaps of description. Let's face it, your reader is most likely to skim right over endless paragraphs of flowery, adjective-laden prose.

I'm talking about those small, concrete details that make a scene ring true to life. A character feel real. A setting come alive so you can practically touch, smell and taste it.

These details are often simple, but the most powerful examples never feel clichéd. The author finds a way to describe something ordinary in a way that feels fresh, yet also deeply familiar.

Image by papaija2008
Today I wanted to share with you some examples from authors I love. Notice the way a talented writer will focus in on one or two small, seemingly trivial details within the larger frame.

"She was a big rawboned plain person, tall and unlikely, with a ragged haircut and a white tee-shirt coming unstitched along the shoulder." - The Idea of Perfection, Kate Grenville

"The coffee was so strong it didn't change color when she poured the milk in. 'You look different,' she said. We sat down at her dining room table, gilded chairs with harp backs. She pulled out small mats with Dutch tulips for our cups." - White Oleander, Janet Fitch

"The guy's wearing a khaki uniform, maybe he's come up from the engine room. He kneels, sets up some kind of monitor, and positions two things with black cords coming out of them on Mr. Stone's battered chest. He has short, blunt fingers with black hairs on them." - The Last Girls, Lee Smith.

"It was 1948 and the countryside, now that I think back on it, was as peaceful and well-ordered as an illustration from a Dick-and-Jane book. Lone gasoline pumps, fields flowered over like bedspreads. Trees turning perfectly red and perfectly yellow. At the entrance to the fairgrounds, a billboard showed a lipsticked, finger-waved housewife holding up a jar of homemade preserves."

In each of these examples, notice that the choice of detail is quite precise and deliberate. What do you think the author is trying to say about the character or setting she is describing?

In these next examples, the authors engage our senses in unexpected ways.

"The horses were behind them, still harnessed but unhitched from the plough, cropping grass with a sound like tearing bed sheets. The tea came out of a thermos but was still hot enough to take the roof off your mouth." - The Other Side of the Bridge, Mary Lawson

"Her hair, the color of caramel straw, was very straight and tattered at the ends; she was chewing gum and a strong smell of Juicy Fruit was coming off her."- The Goldfinch, Donna Tartt

"There was the barbecue with the men around it poking at the cooking meat, and a big table in the shade under a tree, the food all covered with little domes of fly-wire, and a square of bright blue swimming-pool where children were jumping in, splashing up water that was like chips of glass in the sun." - The Idea of Perfection, Kate Grenville

Which of these examples says something to you as a reader? What feelings or associations or ideas do they conjure? 

Your turn. Would you share with us a sentence or two from your WIP where you've used a concrete detail to illuminate a character or setting?






Karen Schravemade lives in Australia, where she mothers by day and transforms into a fearless blogger by night. She's a Genesis finalist for women's fiction and is represented by Rachel Kent of Books & Such. Find her on TwitterGoogle+Pinterest, and getting creative on her home-making blog, A house full of sunshine.




Wednesday, July 3, 2013

The Travelling Writer

By the time you read this post, I’ll be in Scandinavia.



I realize you’re all going to hate me for telling you this, and I’m sorry. Truly. (Although… not all that much.)

The fact is, the hubster and I are about to embark on three weeks of travel through Europe. Sans children.

We’ll be visiting England, Germany, Denmark, Norway and Sweden. It’ll be the first big trip we’ve done since our precious little rugrats came along and rearranged our lives, sanity and wallets. And although we may have been known to cast pining glances toward each other and murmur “2 weeks and 3 days till Europe” at particularly trying parenting moments, the fact is, I will most certainly be a blubbering mess on that plane.

Opportunities like this one don’t come around all that often. If you’re blessed with the ability to travel, as a writer, how can you make the most of it?  

1. Observe voraciously
Take note of the details in your new surroundings. Have a curious mind, alert to the differences you observe in the way people live. People-watch. Note the architecture, the street signs, the way produce is displayed in a grocery store, the flora, the local tastes in food, the cars people drive, the rhythm of daily life. Look past the monuments and buildings and take an interest in things other people don’t see. Take lots of photos, and not just of the tourist attractions. Step away from the crowd and take a picture of the old woman sitting in the gutter, the way the light falls through the trees, the rows of bread in a bakery, the piece of newspaper blowing down the street.

Photo by imagerymajestic, freedigitalphotos.net
2. Keep a journal
It’s incredible how much you’ll forget. You think it will stay with you forever, but time has a way of obscuring even the sharpest impressions. So write it down. On my first overseas trip as a 19-year-old, I wrote longhand in a notebook. I wrote while sitting in sun-soaked alfresco cafes in Italy, on a scenic train in Switzerland, on the bus while driving through France, in my hotel room at night. Don’t just record the things you did and saw. A journal should capture sights, sounds, tastes, and most importantly, how you felt. Anyone can learn facts about a place by looking it up online. But if you ever want to write about a setting you’ve visited, the things that will bring your writing to life will be the sensory richness and the quirky, colorful details that come only from personal experience.  

3. Try new things
There should be no such thing as a narrow-minded writer. Aim to broaden your perspectives and step out of your comfort zone. Try a new food. Get out your phrasebook and order a meal in a language you’ve never spoken before. Strike up a conversation with a local, even if they can barely speak English and you have to communicate with gestures and broken phrases. Hire a bike, throw away your tourist map and explore the back streets. Give yourself an adventure.

4. Be a traveller, not a tourist
I’ll never forget the woman I met years ago on a day-tour in China. When she realized the public bathroom came equipped only with “squatty potties”, she began complaining loudly to everyone on our tour and all the locals within earshot. “This is completely disgraceful! How do they ever hope to attract Western tourists with standards like these! They’d better hope to lift their act before the Beijing Olympics!”

I felt embarrassed to be associated with her. That style of toilet is not what we’re used to in our culture, but if we only wanted to experience our culture – why on earth would we travel? And who says that our way of doing things is inherently better or more superior than someone else’s?

Writers are not tourists, expecting everything to be the same as it is “back home”, with the addition of some picturesque photo opportunities. Writers engage with culture, and therefore, they learn and grow.

For those who think they’ll never travel

Think this list is not applicable to you?

Go back. Read it again. This time, apply it to the place where you live.

You, the writer, should be a voracious observer of daily life. A journaller of rich sensory detail. Willing to take risks and try new things. Able to engage in cultures unfamiliar to you, to look at things from new perspectives, and to live fully absorbed and present, no matter where you may be.

Why not try it? Take the back roads. Talk to a stranger. Find the unexpected in the everyday.

To someone else, your home is a travel destination. Try looking at it through their eyes and see what you discover.

Live as a traveller in your own familiar, surprising world.

Image by chinpipat, freedigitalphotos.net
So how about you, dear readers? What's your favorite place on the globe so far? How about your dream travel destination? 


Karen Schravemade lives in Australia when she’s not gallivanting around the globe (which, unfortunately, is most of the time.)

She would love to respond to your comments, but she’s currently in Norway cruising the fjords and eating sour cream waffles with Brunost and cloudberry cream. 

She’s having a great time though, so she hopes you’ll forgive her.

Oh, and she misses her kids. A lot. 


TWEETABLES

Take the back roads. Talk to a stranger. Find the unexpected in the everyday. Click to tweet

Writers: observe life anew. Live as a traveller in your own familiar, surprising world. Click to tweet


Tips for the travelling writer, and how to write more richly without ever leaving home. Click to tweet