What the Advice Is Actually Trying to Say

Do

Let behavior carry the emotional weight whenever possible. A character who straightens papers on a desk while receiving terrible news tells readers more than a character who “felt her world collapse.”

Avoid

Doubling up. If you show the emotion through action or sensory detail, you usually don’t need to state it too. The double-up is the actual problem “show don’t tell” is trying to fix, and naming it precisely would save a lot of confused writers a lot of wasted revision time.

From My Work

When Telling Is Correct

Do

Use telling for small emotional beats, transitional moments, and anywhere the voice is strong enough to carry the weight of the statement. Not every moment needs to be a full scene.

Avoid

Telling the reader how to feel about something. “She was unlikeable” is telling the reader the conclusion rather than giving them the evidence. That’s the telling that actually doesn’t workβ€”and it’s more specific and useful than “show don’t tell” ever managed to be.

From My Work

The Real Advice Nobody Gives

Do

Develop a feel for when each tool serves the moment. That feel comes from reading widely and revising honestly, not from following a rule.

Avoid

Applying “show don’t tell” as a blanket correction in anyone’s manuscript without explaining specifically what isn’t working and why. It’s the lazy note. It tells the writer nothing actionable and sends them off to “show” things that were working perfectly as told.

Final Thoughts

Extras