The Distance Indicators

Do

Read the scene out loud after cutting the filter phrases. If it sounds more immediate, you’re in the right direction. If it sounds abrupt or confusing, the filter was doing load-bearing work and needs a different solution.

Avoid

Cutting every single filter phrase without considering whether some are doing intentional work. An unreliable narrator needs some of these. A character who is dissociating needs some of these. Removing them all regardless of context flattens the voice.

From My Work

Sensory Experience Over Summary

Do

Give each character a sensory filter that belongs to them. Lisa notices temperature and clinical anomalies. Jack notices exits and threat indicators. The sensory details a character leads with reveal who they are without the writer ever saying it directly.

Avoid

Generic sensory description that could belong to any narrator. “The room smelled like antiseptic” is neutral. “The antiseptic hit harder than usual, sharp enough to scratch the back of her throat” is Lisa.

From My Work

Emotion Through Action, Not Declaration

Do

Let characters have feelings the reader identifies before the character does. Katie in The Death of Me is in love with Martin long before she says so. The reader knows because of what she notices about him, what she reaches for, what she can’t stop thinking about. The declaration, when it finally comes, is confirmation rather than information.

Avoid

Emotion declarations dressed up as physical sensation. “Her heart ached” and “her chest tightened with grief” are still declarations. They’re just wearing a body costume. Find the behavior. Find the displacement. Find what the character does instead of feeling it directly.

From My Work

Voice Consistency Under Pressure

Do

Let your character be themselves under pressure. Their coping mechanisms, their deflections, their specific brand of fear are all character information that belongs in the crisis scene as much as anywhere else.

Avoid

Let your character be themselves under pressure. Their coping mechanisms, their deflections, their specific brand of fear are all character information that belongs in the crisis scene as much as anywhere else.

From My Work

Final Thoughts

Extras