We’ve
all heard this one a million times—show, don’t tell—but what does it actually
mean, is there ever a good time to tell, and is showing really necessary?
Telling
is exactly that. It’s you, the writer,
telling the reader what is happening.
Showing is allowing your characters to act and react on their own, and
letting the reader see that. It’s like being at the bank while it’s being
robbed. You see it happen before your
eyes. You feel the excitement, the
danger, the terror. You are a part of
the robbery. Telling is one or more
steps removed from the actual event.
It’s like listening to your friend tell you about the bank robbery he
witnessed—interesting, but not nearly as exciting. Showing brings the reader closer and makes
your writing more intense.
Some Signs of Telling
The
most obvious sign of telling is passive writing, which is usually writing that
relies on the words was/were or is/are, depending on which tense you’re
using. Many times, those verbs are
followed by another ending in ing.
John was running to the finish
line.
Mary is eating her breakfast.
Both
sentences are passive, and in both cases, the writer is telling us what John
and Mary did. Make them active, and John
and Mary are acting on their own.
John ran to the finish line.
Mary eats her breakfast.
Another
sign is prepositional phrases. If you
are using phrases like – soon, at last, with no thought at all, so, in an instant,
before she could think, just then, when—you are probably telling.
In an instant, Mary’s cereal was gone.
The
above sentence tells us Mary ate fast.
To show Mary eating fast, you would simply say how she ate.
How
much more you added to the above description would depend on the importance of
the scene. If you just want the reader
to know Mary ate fast, the above would be enough. If you wanted to show Mary as a glutton, you
might add a line showing food dribbling from her mouth. If you wanted to show her as a starving girl
getting to eat, you might show a trembling hand.
Another
sign is adverbs—generally words ending in ly like – unfortunately, inevitably,
generally, usually, finally, certainly, and suddenly.
John
finally ran to the finish line.
Unfortunately, he arrived last.
Once
more, the writer is telling us what happened.
The words ‘finally’ and ‘unfortunately’ automatically take it out of
John’s POV and put it into the narrator’s.
Scenes
with no dialogue are also often telling.
Somewhere, the boat sprang a leak. Water was filling it quickly but the boys
couldn’t bail fast enough. In no time at
all, the sea rushed in and the boat sank like a stone. The boys were floating in the cold ocean,
water up to their chins, at least two miles from shore.
The
above is telling. It gets the point
across, but there is no tension or suspense.
It’s just the facts. And notice
the telltale signs of telling. Let’s
turn it into a scene of dialogue.
“We’ve sprung a leak!” John cried.
Alex stared at the water rushing into
the boat. “Quick! Grab something to bail her out.”
John dropped his oar and picked up a
small bucket. He swished it through the
water rising higher and higher in the rowboat.
Alex splashed the water out with his hands.
“It’s no use,” John said.
The ocean lapped at their ankles, their
shins and knees, as the boat sunk lower and lower. Alex stared toward shore, almost two miles
away.
“I can’t swim, John.”
John stared at him as the ocean began to
suck the boat under. He grabbed Alex’s
hand. “Just hang onto me,” he said, and
he pulled Alex into the sea, water lapping at their chins.
When to Show
My
personal thought is to show as much as you can, and certainly, if it’s an
important scene, show it. Action scenes
will become more vivid and real if they are shown. Emotional scenes become stronger and more
powerful. Humorous scenes become
funnier. Scary scenes become creepier. Showing pulls the reader in and helps create
one of those books where the reader gets so caught up in it, they don’t hear
the telephone ring, or the kids burning down the house.
When to Tell
There
are times when you need to tell. Transitioning from one scene to another, and
making a long period of time pass quickly, are places where you’d want to
tell. If your character does something
on a regular basis, like delivering newspapers or going to swim lessons, you
would show what that’s like the first time, and tell all subsequent times,
unless something different and important happened, in which case, you’d revert
to showing. If you want something done
and over with quickly, tell it.
Well,
the truth is, no. It isn’t. You can find many published books that are
more telling than showing, and you can even find plenty that are all telling,
except for the dialogue. Those kinds of
stories are published. But look at it like buying a car. In truth, any car that will seat everyone in
our family is really good enough. It
will get us where we want to go. We
don’t really need a radio or CD
player. We don’t really need automatic windows and GPS. We don’t need
heated seats. But it sure is nice having
all those things. They make a car more
than transportation. They make driving a
much more pleasant experience.
A
car with no extras is serviceable. It
will do the job and get you where you need to go, but that’s about all it will
do. And given a choice between a
serviceable car and one with all the amenities, which would you choose?
The
same holds true for stories. You might
have written a great told story that is fast-paced and exciting, and an agent
or editor may love it after reading it, but if the manuscript she picks up
after yours is fast-paced and exciting and shown,
a story with all the extras, yours will suddenly stand out as lacking and
subpar and, in the end, which do you think the editor will choose?
Want to sell that latest manuscript? Don't give them what they need. Show them all the extras. Give them what they never knew they were missing.
1 comment:
Again, B. An excellent post. Very informative, even to a seasoned vet like me!
J
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