Describing Characters
Descriptions are an important tool in a writer's bag of tricks.
Done correctly, they incite the readers' imaginations, deepen point
of view, and advance the plot and character. But descriptions are
hard to do well. Elmore Leonard said his most important advice to
writers was to "try to leave out all the
parts readers skip." Keep your descriptions lively
and focused
on advancing plot, character,
and establishing point of view
and readers will devour them rather than skip them.
Suppose, for example, you're starting a new story and you have the
following two character profiles:
Joe is twenty-something, an accountant
who is struggling to make ends meet. He's had a hard-scrabble
existence with a community college degree in bookkeeping. He's got
low self-esteem, and he over-compensates by working out obsessively
and studying pre-law in night school.
Jill is an heiress and, like Joe, is
twenty-something. Despite her Ivy League degree, no one takes her
seriously, so she over-compensates by wearing expensive business
suits, keeping a severe, short hairdo, and wearing wire-framed
glasses instead of contacts. Her beloved father is dead and her
mother has re-married.
The plot involves Jill hiring Joe as the fall-guy in a complex and
ruthless plan to swindle her over-bearing step-father. Hmmm...I may
actually wind up writing a story or novella based on these ideas.
I find that it's helpful to find a photo that captures the image I
have in my mind. When your novel goes into production, the artist
assigned to your cover will almost certainly ask you for descriptions
or even a stock photo of your main characters. Thus, I will often
search for this photo early in the writing process. Having a
physical image helps keep me grounded and consistent throughout the
creative process. There are many sites where you can peruse for stock
images, and you can purchase royalty-free images for a modest price.
For example, for Joe I found the image at right on dreamstime.com.
While it's inexpensive to purchase a royalty-free image--the one
above cost about $1--you can download a copy for free that's
overprinted with the site name and logo. The original, uncropped
photo of Joe with the Dreamstime logo, is at right. You can't use
that for public distribution since you've not paid for the rights,
but it would suffice for your personal use while writing your novel.
Just for completeness, let me include a photo that matches my
mental image of Jill, at left.
All right. So I now have photos of what Joe and Jill look like
and what the plot will be. So next I need to describe them. But
wait--there's another challenge. Joe and Jill will likely both be
point-of-view characters. The first chapter will thus almost
certainly use one or the other for the point of view. Thus, I'll
need to describe the point of view character while in his or her
point of view. That's tricky. Suppose we're going to be in
Joe's point of view.
Let's start by listing what we'd like the reader to know about
Joe's appearance the first time they meet him. First would be his
age and gender. Second might be that he's muscular and obsessive
about fitness. Third might be his stubble beard, dark hair, and
maybe a mussed appearance to go with being a working stiff.
The challenge, of course, is to achieve this without using a trite
contrivance like having him look in a mirror. It's even worse to
have the narrator, standing outside the story, describe him. The
information about how he looks needs to flow naturally with unfolding
events, revealed in the words and deeds of the characters.
Here's an initial attempt.
Joe was lost in the depths old lady
Marchan's tax return. With his right hand he scrolled through her
deductions, while with his left he flexed an exercise handgrip. He
grimaced as a satisfying burn flamed in his forearm, but then the
chime built into the doormat told him a customer had entered the
office. He hid the grip under a stack of tax forms and turned to face
the door. The new arrival was a willowy brunette who looked to be
about his age or maybe a bit younger, say 22 or 23, with no makeup,
cold, blue eyes and creamy skin that made him think of Michelangelo's
Pieta.
He rose to his feet and extended his hand.
"Good evening, ma'am. I'm Joe Hatcher." Now that he was
standing, she seemed taller than he'd first thought, nearly equal to
his six feet. It was almost like her clothes and posture conspired
to make him underestimate her. He forced a grin. "What can I
do for you?"
She barely touched his calloused hand. When
she spoke, her frosty contralto sent shivers down his spine. "I'm
here to engage your services, Mister...Hatcher, did you say your name
was?"
Jesus, what was this woman doing in a place
like Acme's Accounting Services? Like his suit, Joe was Walmart, and
she was Saks Fifth Avenue. He ran his fingers over his stubbled chin
and nodded to the guest chair. "Have a seat and we'll see what
we can do." Hard knocks had taught him to never turn down an
opportunity, no matter how unlikely.
She perched on the edge of the plastic seat
and chewed her lip. Her straight bangs fell across her brow and
obscured her trendy silver eyeglasses, but her hair was buzzed short
on the sides, nearly as short as Joe's razor cut.
A car drove through the strip mall's parking
lot, its radio blaring hip-hop and its bass thumping.
Joe settled back into his chair and waited.
Was she going to speak, or what? The overhead fluorescent light
flickered and buzzed, casting a harsh glow over the cramped office.
Silence stretched.
This is all first draft, and the rough edges of craft still stick
out, but let's take a look at what's here. First, notice that it
includes all the information about Joe's appearance in the original
list without stopping the story by saying, "Joe was over six feet,
with a stubble beard and a cheap suit." Instead, we learn this
in the natural flow of events. We even learn that he's maybe a
little more sophisticated than he lets on, since Jill's skin
reminds him of the marble in a famous Renaissance sculpture.
These paragraphs also include a description
of Jill, including that her appearance is deceptive. We've also
got a hint of the class difference between Joe and Jill. Finally, we
know from her icy expression and frosty tone that she's cold.
It's also worth noting that the opening sentences are designed
to draw the reader into Joe's head. He's doing something--lost
in the return--and exercising his grip. The latter leads to a burn
in his arm, a subjective feeling that puts the readers squarely
inside his head. The doormat chimes, he reacts, and the willowy
brunette walks in. We get some final scene setting with the
flickering light in the "cramped" office and the hip-hop music
blasting from the parking lot of the strip mall.
There's also some tension building as she chews her lip and
doesn't speak. Hopefully, at this point the reader is hooked.
What does the woman want? Clearly, Joe hopes to make some money, but
the situation screams that there is risk--that the woman isn't
going to be honest with him. After all, the reader knows there
wouldn't be a story here unless there is something going on!
Kurt Vonnegut said that every sentence should advance plot or
character, and preferably both. I'm not as skilled as Vonnegut by
any stretch, but I think almost every sentence in the above
accomplishes one or both of those goals while at the same time
conveying information about setting and the appearance of the
characters. This isn't easy to do, but with some thought and
attention to craft, it's not impossibly difficult, either.
|