By:
Write Divas
It’s
tempting to over-describe, isn’t it? It’s a must to give your readers insight
into your characters’ pasts and relationships with one another, the setting of
your story, and to set up coming events. Isn’t it just easier to do it all in
one big chunk? After all, that room your characters are standing in isn’t going
to describe itself .
The
problem with chunks of over-description is that it makes your story read like a
lecture, checklist, or an infomercial. People hate infomercials for a reason,
checklists belong on a chores list and lectures belong in the classroom, not
your book. Remember that teacher in the Peanut’s cartoons? She would stand
before the class and lecture and all of her words turned into “waahnt -wa -wah ,
wa -waaa …” Yes, this is what your lovingly crafted words become when you litter
your manuscript with filler.
But
before you spend paragraph after paragraph describing that room, you need to
ask yourself three questions.
Is
the description necessary/important to the scene or merely distracting filler?
. .
.
Read the full article HERE!
~*~
If you
missed my writing & marketing tweets and retweets yesterday, here they are
again:
- How to Outline Your Novel With A Bulletin Board | Darla G. Denton http://ow.ly/IcMQZ
- Serve me up a Side of Description; Hold the Chunks - Write Divas http://ow.ly/IcMVm
- 4 Approaches for the First Chapter of Your NovelWritersDigest.com | WritersDigest.com http://ow.ly/IcN0u
- Fiction University: Do You Have Too Much Dialog? http://ow.ly/IcNW5
- The Kill Zone: Gag Orders, And Other Rules To Get The Most From Critique Groups http://ow.ly/IcO0h
- The Secrets to Building a More Strategic, Valuable Blog - Amy Porterfield http://ow.ly/IcO5o
- “Word of Email” Marketing to Explode Your Business | Irresistible Marketing http://ow.ly/IcOeu
- Ksenia Anske Books/Blog/How I launch my books: I DON'T http://ow.ly/IcOBb
- Kidlit · Characters Who Care http://ow.ly/IcOKm
- Facebook’s Call to Action Button | Indies Unlimited http://ow.ly/IcOSR
- C is for Costs Part 1 - Self Publishing Tips from A to Z - Author Zoo http://ow.ly/IcOZ6
- Five Tips to Building an Email List | Book Marketing Services http://ow.ly/IcP7m
- Why Chocolate Is Good For You AND Your Writing | Book Marketing Tools Blog http://ow.ly/IcPfG
- The
Romantic
Sub-Plot - Six Uncommon Romantic Love Interests - Writers Write http://ow.ly/IcPtW - Do Lower Prices Lead to More Sales? - Copyblogger http://ow.ly/IcPFA
- How to Get Our Thoughts onto the Page | Jami Gold, Paranormal Author http://ow.ly/IcPU1v
- Regaining Confidence in a Project - Elizabeth Spann Craig http://ow.ly/IcQ3u
- Fiction University: Red Ink In the Trenches: A Copyeditor’s Perspective http://ow.ly/IcQ7m
- Grammar
Girl
: Less Versus Fewer: : Quick and Dirty Tips ™ http://ow.ly/IcQgq - How To Give Constructive Writing Criticism (That Actually Helps) | Positive Writer http://ow.ly/IcQpa
- “Write Drunk, Edit Sober” Is Bad Advice http://ow.ly/IcQzt
- The External Story vs. The Internal Story with Lori Wilde | Romance University http://ow.ly/IcQIm
- 8 Reasons Your Submission Strategy Sucks (And What You Can Do About It) | The Review Review http://ow.ly/IcQOn
- How Dreams and Habits Make You a Wildly Productive Writer http://ow.ly/IcQSR
- Business Musings: Traditional Numbers | Kristine Kathryn Rusch http://ow.ly/IcQYl
- Tax Tips for Writers Who Hate Math by Helen Sedwick — The Book Designer http://ow.ly/IcR4r
- Book-Writing Productivity Hacks - Business Insider http://ow.ly/IcRk4
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