C. J. Winters

See It To Believe It

by
C. J. Winters

Can you make a scene come alive by letting your readers feel the intense emotion flowing between the Heroine and Hero, or experience the electric hatred and fear rampaging between the Villain and Victim?  If so, you have a skill to treasure.  If not, take heart, keep writing, listening, writing, reading, writing, editing, writing, critiquing, editing and writing, and you will learn.

Notice I used the word skill, not talent, in the above paragraph.  That's because talents are inborn, in varying guises and degrees.  Skills, on the other hand, are what we make of our talents. Developing skill is a matter of practice, practice, and more practice.  No amount of talent without practice can propel a pianist, ballet dancer, or basketball player to the top of his or her profession.  So it is with writing.  Most of us cringe when we reread the first draft of our first story or novel.  How far we've progressed since then!  And that progress has come through practice, practice in inserting a word, rearranging a sentence, deleting a phrase, scrapping a scene, rounding out characters by giving them lives-before-the-story-begins, including details that may bring out suppressed longings, stimulate memories, and even call forth new ways of seeing in our readers.

So where does your story begin?  Not, I hope, in a vacuum.  I hope you quickly make it clear to this reader Where and When the action is happening, as well as Who is involved and (depending on the plot) something of the Why. Historical and fantasy writers know they must immediately place us in the story locale and time frame.  Too often, though, unskilled writers of contemporary stories lose me because they don't draw me into the scene.  I read their words, maybe even feel the emotions they wanted to express, but if I don't see the scene in my mind's eye, no amount of character charm or plot intricacy will hold my attention.  Draw me pictures in tantalizing bits and pieces rather than in one dense paragraph.  Make me see the zebra-striped pillows, their once white zig-zags now grubby gray, and the framed wild animal prints on the dingy white wall, their once strong, earthy colors faded to unhealthy pink tones by the hot afternoon sun pouring through a window unwashed since the building was erected in 1984.  Make me hear the sounds of unruly street traffic seeping through the cheap construction.  And make sure I smell the cooked broccoli from the vegetarian grad student's apartment down the hall.

New writers are constantly urged to include sensory detail to make their story come alive, to make all of our imaginative senses–Sight, Touch, Hearing, Taste and Smell--help place us in the scene.  For this reader, at least, Sight must come First.

(A fabulous resource on this subject is A Natural History of The Senses by Diane Ackerman.)

©2004 C. J. Winters

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