Show, Don’t (Just) Tell

Jerz > Writing > Creative >

7 Simple but Effective Tips for More Engaging, Persuasive Writing

Don’t just tell me your brother is talented… show me what he can do, and let me decide whether I’m impressed. To convince your readers, show, don’t just tell them what you want them to know.

There. I’ve just told you something. Pretty boring, huh? Now, let me show you.

Bad ExampleMy brother is talented.
There’s nothing informative, or engaging, or compelling about this sentence. You have no reason to believe or disbelieve me, and no reason to care. This is vague TELLING.

(To be honest, the problem here is more the vagueness than the telling, but for now I’m working with the “Show, Don’t Tell” meme, rather than against it.)

It Was Naptime: Show Don't (Just) Tell

Good ExampleMy brother modifies sports car engines, competes in ballroom dance tournaments, and analyzes chess algorithms.
“Wow, that guy is talented,” you say to yourself.

Or maybe you say something else. Maybe you think fooling with automobiles is a waste of time, or maybe you think competing in tournaments is brave, or maybe you think computer-assisted chess isn’t really chess.

Whatever the case, you didn’t sit there passively waiting for me to TELL you what you’re supposed to feel or think about my brother. Instead, I SHOWED you very specific details that I chose because I expect they will generate some response from you.

(Creative writers, see Short Stories: 10 Tips for Creative Writers, Crisis vs. Conflict, and Developing Ideas for Short Fiction.)

But telling is good too, as long as it’s the right kind of telling.  According to my colleague Timons Esaias, it all boils down to this:

  • Tell us what the character did, not what the character’s face did.
  • Tell us what they saw, not where they looked. Then tell us what it meant to them.
  • Tell us what they thought, what they planned, and how it went wrong.
  • And if they see facial expressions, don’t tell us what they are; tell us what they meant to the character.

Contents

  1. Choose Specific Details That Show Your Point
  2. Give the Reader a Reason to Feel Your Emotions
  3. Provide Engaging Details That Imply the Main Point
  4. Show with Informative Details and/or  Emotional Language
  5. “Telling” States Facts; “Showing” Invites Deeper Understanding
  6. Showing Prefers the Specific to the General
  7. Sometimes, “Telling” Is Good

1) Choose Specific Details That Show Your Point

You won’t need to write a boring, uninformative and unpersuasive sentence like “You shouldn’t text while driving” if you can instead SHOW your point, through well-chosen details  (such as statistics, specific examples, or personal stories) that SHOW in a persuasive way the negative results of texting while driving.

Let’s consider this point: “This tired child probably doesn’t want a nap.” That’s pretty dry, so let’s try to make it more vivid and persuasive.

Bad ExampleThe little girl looked crabby. Clearly, naptime would be difficult.
This sentence gets right to the point, but nothing about it engages the reader. If this observation is important to the story, consider giving readers enough details to work out the connection for themselves.
Iffy ExampleThe brown-eyed little girl wore a plastic Viking cap, and her mouth was sticky from candy. Standing there in her orange dress-up gown, she was quite a sight. She looked more tired than I had ever seen a child look. But she was so very stubborn, I could clearly see we were headed for a battle.
This version expands on the girl’s appearance, but outside of a classroom assignment that asks you to describe something in detail, simply adding random specific details is not of much value.

What does wearing a Viking cap or a gown have to do with being tired? Why does the color of the gown matter?

Adding descriptive language — “The adorably elegant, pint-sized pumpkin-orange dress-up gown” — doesn’t help the author make any point.

But what about calling it a “convict-orange dress-up gown”? The unusual word choice could hint at her temperament.

Good ExampleHer brown, sleepy eyes hardened into red slits. Brandishing a cardboard shield and a decapitated lollipop, she cocked her plastic Viking helmet so that the points stuck out a little more than her curls.  “You mean dragon! You’ll never make me nap!”
Most of the details in this version aren’t just randomly descriptive; they contribute to a theme, and thus help SHOW the reader what’s at stake — an epic naptime battle. (There is one detail that’s just random, and could easily be cut. Can you spot it? Answer below.)

The important details provide clues that you can assemble, so that you say to yourself, “Wow, that little girl is stubborn, and she sure needs that nap!”

  • But what if, when you read that version, the message you get is completely different?
  • You might say to yourself, “That horrible child deserves a spanking,” or “I hope naptime battles don’t crush her creative spunk.” The point is, you are interpreting what the details show, you are building on those details — you are engaging with the examples in a meaningful way.
  • For a given writing task, if communicating a precise, factual, word-for-word message (such as “the red zone is for immediate loading and unloading of passengers only”) is more important than engaging the reader’s emotions, imagination, and/or intellect, then in that case, telling is more efficient than showing.

The random detail is the color of the girl’s eyes. Unless it’s some kind of clue that will become important later in the story, cut it.

Showing well-chosen details can help drive home the message you want to tell. (Thus, the title of this page is “Show, Don’t (Just) Tell,” not “Show, Don’t Tell.”)

2) Give the Reader a Reason to Feel Your Emotions

If you are writing a set of instructions or a professional e-mail, you don’t want to tease the reader by SHOWING indirectly. To convey complex technical details, TELL (“insert tab A into slot B”) and be done with it.

But if you want to engage the reader’s heart, mind, and imagination, SHOW with vivid details that generate, in your reader, the emotions you want to express. Rather than classify and list all the emotions that YOU felt, use specific details that give the READER a reason to feel those emotions.

Bad ExampleI’ll never forget how I felt after Fido died. I was miserable.
Simply naming the feelings that you experienced (telling your reader what you felt) is not enough to create interest in the reader. Can you find a way to generate, in your reader, the same feelings that you experienced?
Iffy ExampleIf I live for a thousand years, I’ll never forget how utterly and terribly alone I felt after Fido died. Months and months went by, and it seemed that every little thing reminded me of him. I don’t know whether I am ever going to get over his death.
While the author has added specific details, those details merely assist the telling — they don’t actually give the reader a reason to love Fido,and to suffer along with the writer.
Good ExampleWhenever puppies in the pet store window distracted me from our walk, Fido flattened his scruffy ears, growling. But he always forgave me. As his sight faded, the smell of fresh air and the feel of grass would make him try to caper. Eventually, at the sound of my voice, his tail thumped weakly on the ground. This morning, I filled his water bowl all the way to the top–just the way he likes it–before I remembered.
Reading this last revision (schlocky, I know) always makes me sad. The carefully chosen details help us to understand the relationship between the pet and his owner.

  • We see the dog is jealous of puppies, we see that he grows increasingly weak, and we see the author is still in the habit of caring for this dog.
  • We don’t need to know what color the dog is or how cute his nose is (just as we don’t need to know what the author looks like).

Because the author does not supply a sentence that announces, “I loved Fido and still can’t believe he’s gone,” the reader is left to make that connection. That means the reader has to engage with the author’s details, and becomes more intellectually and emotionally engaged in the story as a result.

3) Encourage the Reader’s Involvement: Show Details that Imply the Main Point

Bad ExampleFrom the way she behaved in the crowded restaurant, you could tell Sally was attracted to the cute stranger in the black shirt. She tried a few things to get his attention, and eventually she thought she succeeded.
The author wastes no time providing the information, but the story is very thin… nothing interesting seems to be happening.

 

Good ExampleThat stranger had been scanning the room, and this time, Sally thought his eyes flickered in her direction. Wait — was that a half smile? Had he just put his hand on his heart? Or was he just brushing something off of his shirt? That shirt looked soft. Sally smiled.

He’s kind of cute,” her roommate giggled.

Sally casually looked away, twirling a curl. “Oh, I don’t know,” she said, letting her eyes rest on the artwork, the flowers, a random face in the crowd, and found another excuse to laugh. Carefully turning her profile, she crossed her legs like her friends had practiced in middle school.

That ought to do it, she thought.

The reader is left to figure out what’s going on, which is more engaging for a story. There is tension, and even a bit of character development.

The original version of Sally’s story tells me a few specific but isolated details — for instance, the color of the stranger’s shirt. But is that detail important? (It’s not.) Without coming right out and saying “Sally was attracted to the man,” the revision shows a series of different details (Sally notices the shirt, then wonders what it feels like) that come together to form a pattern– but the author does not come right out and announce what the pattern means.

Is Sally a sultry spy at an embassy dinner, or a knobby-kneed teen about to face a humiliating rejection? At this point, we can only imagine — and that keeps us reading.

Bad ExampleWinning is important to me. It doesn’t matter to me what I do, so long as I win.
Unengaging and unconvincing. This is like saying “I am a hard worker” or “I am a fast learner.” Anyone can make those claims, but without proof they have no persuasive force.
Good ExampleOn the shelf in my bedroom is a first-place football trophy, and a first-place chess trophy.  Above my bed on one side is the head of a four-point buck I shot when I was 16, and on the other side is a framed photo of me winning “Junior Chef of the Year.”  Before you ask me to play cards, you should have a full wallet.  If your son wants to play marbles with me, he should know I play for keeps.  If your daughter starts crying while I’m playing house with her, I won’t stop until she looks me in the eye, and admits, “You won!”
Okay, the bit about trying to “win” while “playing house” is a bit extreme — I wouldn’t recommend putting that in a resume, but my point in including it in this example is to demonstrate how well-chosen details can generate an emotional response in the reader that a dry statement cannot.

4) Show with Informative Details and/or Emotional Language

Bad ExampleI like many different sports, from skiing to rock-climbing, but when it comes right down to it, I would have to say that ping-pong is my favorite sport.
Telling (No Details) — Snooze. This kind of writing can help you meet a word count, but it really boils down to “I like ping-pong.” All the rest is filler. There’s nothing in this passage that expresses how the author feels about ping-pong, and nothing that informs or persuades the reader.
Iffy ExamplePing-pong is a really interesting sport. Casual players may find it relaxing, but to get really good, you need manual dexterity, agility and endurance.
Telling (Dry Details) — While the author has added details, those details merely assist the telling — this passage still starts out with “I like ping-pong.” A reader who doesn’t already love ping-pong will have no reason to change his or her mind.
Good ExamplePing-pong may look like a relaxing pastime, but for experts, winning the game requires manual dexterity, agility, and endurance.
Showing with  Informative Detail — While there’s nothing particularly engaging in this opening, if the rest of the paper demonstrates that, in order to make the transition from “relaxing pastime” to “winning the game,” you need “dexterity,” “agility” and “endurance,” then you see that this sentence isn’t just a random list of stuff to talk about. This opening line isn’t just throat-clearing or filler — it’s a carefully chosen table of contents, mentioning the topic of each of the supporting paragraphs.
Good ExampleHe’s poised to return what he thinks will be an underspin chop. If he doesn’t fake me out again, and I can stay on my feet for just a little longer, I just might win the 2022 Table Tennis World Championship.

The first time a ping-pong ball sent me to the ER, yes, alcohol was involved. But the second and third times…

Showing with Emotional Language — There’s no need for the author of the last sample to write, “I like ping-pong” or “ping-pong is more serious than you think,” because the vivid details all show these points.

The writer of this version uses a technical term, mentions fake-outs, mentions endurance, and teases a pretty good story (or several). This document might not be as technically or factually informative as the “Showing with Detail” paragraph, but if your goal is to convey the idea that ping-pong is worthy of serious attention, then this kind of personal approach may be just the thing.

5) “Telling” states facts or observations. “Showing” invites much deeper understanding.

Bad ExampleAll the kids knew that Lucinda was the meanest kid in the third grade. She was prissy and cute, and she thought that meant she could get away with anything. She would always go out of her way to torment me. I wasn’t one of the “cool” kids, and the few kids I knew were just the guys I played chess with during recess — they weren’t really friends. Plus, I was clumsy. So I was a good target. She tormented me so much she made the third grade a living hell.
Okay, we understand the author wants us to think Lucinda is mean, but we don’t actually see her do anything. Does the narrator have a good reason to fear Lucinda, or is the narrator a whiner-baby? There’s not enough information for us to know (or care).
Good ExampleWhen the recess bell rang, I grabbed my chess set and dashed to freedom, eager to win the daily tournament of outcasts. I didn’t look, but I was sure I could feel those curly locks swaying as her head tracked me. Of course, I tripped in the doorway. Tennis shoes and sandals stepped around me as I scrambled after pawns and bishops. And there was Lucinda, waiting for me to notice her. She lifted her patent-leather shoe, and carefully ground her heel on the head of my white queen.
Here, we get details that indicate that the narrator and Lucinda seem to be paying a great deal of attention to each other. The narrator feels her presence, and she waits until she has his attention before crushing his queen. These details are specific, but we aren’t told what we should feel, so we can judge for ourselves.

Both passages make the same point, but the second does a much better job of engaging the reader.

The second passage focuses in detail on one specific event. Instead of simply calling himself clumsy (as in the first passage), the author shows us one specific occasion when he trips, and the writing brings us down to the ground with him, so that we see what he sees and feel what he feels.

The second passage never comes out and says “I didn’t have any friends,” but the fact that nobody stops to help the narrator makes us gather that the guy is an outcast. We learn quite a bit about the author in just that passage.

Ultimately, there is no need to call Lucinda mean in the second passage, because that concept is conveyed effectively by the surprising detail of the shiny patent-leather shoe crushing the queen. There is no deadwood — it is packed with details, creating a more vivid emotional picture than the first one.

We actually learn something about Lucinda — she is not just being mean, she wants the narrator’s attention, too. Notice that she attacked the queen, of all pieces. Does she consider the chess set to be her competition?

6) Showing Prefers the Specific to the General

Bad ExampleHe looked at me in a way that wasn’t exactly threatening, but still made me uncomfortable.
This is just a fancier way of telling the reader a feeling by stating something that happened and spelling out exactly what effect it had on you. What, exactly, did this guy do with his eyes, face, and body that made you uncomfortable? Describe his actions, and show your reader exactly what made you uncomfortable.

  • Did he waggle his eyebrows at you in a vaguely sensual manner?
  • Did he stare directly at you while taking a gigantic bite out of a chicken wing, so that bits of cartilage crunched in his mouth as he chewed?
  • Did he keep glancing up at a point just above your head, as if something was about to drop on you, and then laugh when you looked up to see for yourself?
Bad ExampleClearly, something must be done about this terrible crisis.
The words “clearly” or variations (“nobody can doubt that…” or “as we all know”) are often signs that the writer isn’t entirely sure the point that follows is persuasive enough. (I confess, I use such words myself, so they can’t be all bad… obviously.)Instead of just announcing that a certain thing is “terrible” or “horrendous” or “the most hideous thing you can possibly imagine” and expecting your reader to believe you, a good writer should present evidence (vivid examples) that lead the reader to conclude, on his or her own, that this thing is terrible.

7) Sometimes, “Telling” Is Good

When our goal is simply to inform, not to persuade or engage, TELLING does the job quite well — particularly if it’s part of an overall strategy.

That’s the reason I didn’t call this handout “Show, Don’t Tell” — I called it “Show, Don’t (Just) Tell,” because it’s perfectly acceptable to TELL the minor details that add up to the point you want to SHOW. In fact, it’s necessary to TELL.

For instance, in the opening example, I simply TOLD you that my brother modifies sports engines. I could have SHOWN his interest in cars instead: “His hands are grease-stained, he owns NASCAR posters, and on Saturday afternoons, he’s usually under his car.” But to SHOW you his interest in cars, I had to TELL you details about his hands, how he decorates his house, and what he does with his time.

I carefully chose what details to TELL, expecting those details to add up in a meaningful way that SHOWS you something in an engaging way.

Good Example“Our coach is a former champion wrestler, but now he is overpaid, overweight, and over forty.” —Dena Taylor
This example TELLS a string of details, carefully organized for humorous effect — and the speaker’s choice to present the coach this way gives us a glimpse of their relationship.Based on the speaker’s attitude, how do you think the team has been faring so far this season? What relationship does the speaker have with the coach? The combination of details and tone SHOW far more than what any individual detail TELLS.So this is an excellent use of TELLING minor details in order to SHOW a bigger point.
Good Example“These are the times that try men’s souls.” —Thomas Paine
In stark contrast to the flowery language in political tracts designed for the nobility, Tom Paine uses stark, plain language to engage the common citizen.Later in the piece, he SHOWS with details exactly why he feels men’s souls are tried, and he persuades his audience what they should do about it. But here, he is TELLING something that the audience already agrees with, so that he can capture their attention and get them to listen to his bigger points.
Good Example “I am your father.” — Darth Vader
The bluntness of this statement adds to the dramatic punch as Luke reacts to the news in “The Empire Strikes Back.”
  • Technical Writing: What is It?
    Technical writing is the presentation of information that helps the reader solve a particular problem. Scientific and technical communicators write, design, and/or edit proposals, reports, instruction manuals, web pages, lab reports, newsletters, and many other kinds of professional documents.
  • Usability Testing: 8 Quick Tips for Designing Tests
    If you already have a prototype and you want to conduct a usability test, and you’re eager to learn how to make the most of your opportunity to learn from your users, then this document is for you. Keep…
  • Quotations: Integrating them in MLA-Style Papers
    The MLA-style in-text citation is a highly compressed format, designed to preserve the smooth flow of your own ideas (without letting the outside material take over your whole paper). A proper MLA inline citation uses just the author’s last name and the page number (or line number), separated by a space (not a comma).
  • Titles for Web Pages: In-Context and Out-of-Context
    Most writers know the value of an informative title, but many beginning web authors don’t know that each web page needs two kinds of titles. The in-context (IC) title always sits at the top of a page, with the rest…
  • Active and Passive Verbs
    Active verbs form more efficient and more powerful sentences than passive verbs. This document will teach you why and how to prefer active verbs. * The subject of an active sentence performs the action of the verb: “I throw the ball.” * The subject of a passive sentence is still the main character of the sentence, but something else performs the action: “The ball is thrown by me.”
  • Blurbs: Writing Previews of Web Pages
    On the Web, blurbs are compressed summaries of what a reader will find on the other end of a hyperlink. Good blurbs don’t harangue (“Click here!”) or tease (“Learn ten great tips!”). You’re reading a blurb now. If it helps you decide whether to click the link, it’s done its job.
  • Short Stories: Developing Ideas for Short Fiction
    A short story is tight — there is no room for long exposition, there are no subplots to explore, and by the end of the story there should be no loose ends to tie up. End right at the climax, so that the reader has to imagine how a life-changing event will affect the protagonist.
  • Short Stories: 10 Tips for Creative Writers (Kennedy and Jerz)
    Short stories make every word count. They avoid unnecessary scenes, characters, and plot points. It usually focuses on a single problem and a short time period. This page offers tips on writing dialogue, building to a climax, and capturing the reader’s interest.
  • MLA Style: Step-By-Step Instructions for Formatting MLA Papers
    Need to write a paper in MLA format? This step-by-step includes images showing how to use MS-Word to create the title block, page layout, and works cited list.
  • Writing Effective E-Mail: Top 10 Tips
    People decide to read or trash e-mails in seconds. From the subject line to the closing, offer a focused, scannable message that puts your reader’s needs first.

by Dennis G. Jerz

  • 08 May 2000 — posted in ORR
  • 15 Jun 2000 — minor edits
  • 31 Oct 2002 — added Wood’s comment on inference
  • Apr 2003 — revised, trimmed, added different examples
  • 03 Mar 2004 — corrected Vader quote.
  • 14 Sep 2006 — expanded Fido example; minor tweaking
  • 10 Sep 2010 — tightened writing; added ping-pong example
  • 23 Oct 2010 — added naptime example; ongoing tweaks
  • 30 Mar 2011 — more minor tweaks
  • 06 Apr 2011 — adding “texting” example; adding tail-thumping to Fido example; other minor edits.
  • 26 Jul 2011 — formatting; added ToC; beefed up “telling” section
  • 01 Feb 2012 — added passages about how “showing” can convey different messages to different readers, so it’s appropriate to “tell” when the exact words of a message are important.
  • 10 Feb 2012 — formatting tweaks
  • 12 Feb 2017 — minor edits

 

175 thoughts on “Show, Don’t (Just) Tell

  1. Pingback: 10 New Year’s Resolutions for Writers | WowPow

  2. Pingback: Great moments from Pride and Prejudice | Jerz's Literacy Weblog

  3. Pingback: Vocabulary; Skill- Showing not Telling | Mr. Funk's Web Site

  4. Pingback: LISTerati: 10 Quotes about Showing vs. Telling | Ellie Lewis

  5. Pingback: Visualization isn’t just visual - The Road Less Written

  6. Very informative and interesting! I wasn’t really searching for this subject, but I read it and show don’t tell is fascinating and it would surely be useful examples, as I would like to be a better writer. I follow a self study Essentials of Fiction Writing course.
    I would like to know if you have examples about character development? I have to create a new character from scratch and use this to develop a story idea. I have the character traits written down (most of it), but I got stuck in to create and writing a scene, to imagine that the character comes in a situation, that his/her weakness would be a particular problem. Could you please give me some advice, suggestions, or show me examples that would be helpful to start writing the scene?
    Thank you

  7. Pingback: Random! | Pearltrees

  8. Pingback: Izzy May I: The Write Shot in the Foot | Izzy-grabs-life

  9. Pingback: Show Me the Money | The Knights of the Folding Table

  10. Oh nooo! I hope people don’t take this type of advice literally. At most, it is meant to improve your writing without elaborating to the point of tediousness; readers want the plot to move along smoothly. When a writer fills pages with too many “trimmings” to the story, they bog down the reader into a suffocating position. Sure, as a reader I like description, but pointing out the details about a character’s reaction from head to toe weighs heavily on anyone’s patience. Learning the basics of writing is important, but in the end, your personal style will guide you into writing effectively, but intuitively, straight from the heart. Readers will appreciate your honesty, even if it seems brief at times.

    • This handout advocates carefully choosing details in order to make a point, rather than filling pages with elaborate and tedious trimmings. Also, see item 7, “Sometimes, ‘Telling’ Is Good.” Note that the title of the page is not “Show, Don’t Tell” it’s “Show, Don’t (Just) Tell.”

  11. Pingback: WWA Due October 23 | Mrs. Read's Website

  12. Pingback: Technical Thursday-Showing not Telling; Work on Essays | Mr. Funk's Web Site

  13. Pingback: Show don’t Tell – Introduzione : Sognando Leggendo

  14. Pingback: Are You Collecting Customer Stories? Show Them. Don't Tell Them - StipseStipse

  15. I am totally handicapped. Cannot teach I feel useless. a professor in sport psychology at university of va suggested I check out writing based on some assignments I passed in. Got lots of stuff would it ever work? I love to read to my class from picture books to young adult. I am so discouraged. Can I just send a sample of a character profile to see if I have any talent? Thankyou
    Cynthia
    please write or call. My computer service is not reliable in the hills of VA.

  16. Pingback: Show, Don’t (Just) Tell | Jerz's Literacy Weblog

  17. Pingback: Show vs. Tell II | Nina Kaytel

  18. Pingback: Best content strategy links of the week, November 1 - Find Alternative Route

  19. Pingback: Writing and thinking: specific and general |

  20. Pingback: If I read another post on ‘show, don’t tell,’ I’m going to puke … oh, wait | Salting the Muse

  21. This is an awesome article, it really helped me. It engaged me because it’s so specific!

    Specifically this part “But to SHOW you his interest in cars, I had to TELL you details about his hands, how he decorates his house, and what he does with his time.” All details are telling, but what they add up to is showing. I had been thinking about that and it was bothering me — I needed someone to express it.

    Thank you, saving forever.

  22. Pingback: Writing and thinking: specific and general |

  23. Thank you for replying to my question about character thought. I read what was e-mailed to me, but I can not seem to locate the whole of your response. I do use the italics to emphasis words. Another writer pointed out to me that so mobile devices will not show the reader the italics, hence the single quotation marks or as you suggest no punctuation. I’m still trying to understand the ‘no punctuation. Thank you for re-visiting my question.

  24. I like your blog.
    I’m 15 and I already got a manuscript submitted. They said that they’d reply about it within 3 months but now it’s over 5. Probably you can tell me how to write a good mail that’d get me answered.

  25. Q: Dear Sir,
    I am an IGCSE year 10 Egyptian student, my writing is weak in (contents, structure, organization and style), also I have not good ideas for writing, poor vocabulary.
    I got grade D in the exam.
    Kindly give me advise how can I improving my writing.
    Thank you for your help.

    • My general advice would be to read, read, read. Alternate between books in subjects you are studying and anything that interests you, serious or not. Comic books, Star Trek novels, scripts for movies you like, biographies of people you admire, travel guides to cities you like. Anything. Also, write every day — keep a blog, or start participating in a public forum on a topic that you know something about. I’m sure your teachers would be willing to give you feedback on your assignments, but is there an English club, a student newspaper or creative writing club, anywhere you could meet other students who are interested in improving their writing? Partner up with some other students, and share and critique what the group members write.

  26. Question: I like to write in present tense. Here’s my problem, when I need to refer back to a past event … to let my readers know what had happened, say earlier in the day or even yesterday. I write that in the past tense. Is this incorrect? My readers tell me I keep switching my tenses, which I do in referring to past events. If this is incorrect, how else does one refer to past events? Of course a nagging friend says just write in the past tense. :(

  27. Pingback: Writer Resources: Writing to Engage | On Writing, Life, and Everything

  28. Pingback: Fathers disappear from households across America — Jerz's Literacy Weblog

  29. Thank you for your response. I will need to review my stories in changing to double quotes, but not all my sentences end with he thought or she thought. Maybe the way I write the sentence I can make it clearer the character is thinking or speaking. Would doing this also help? If you have any examples showing how a thought sentences would look, that would be appreciated or recommend a book or website. Thanks again for answering my questions.

  30. I thought over your reply. If using double quotations marks, would it confuse the reader what was said vs their thought? I have found the italics looks very busy and distracting when using it for thoughts. I like to use the italics to set off a word or in some cases in my writing a dream. Is that incorrect to do? I do keep my single quotation marks consistent in all my stories for thoughts, as you mentioned in your reply. I thank you for your help.

    • Well, if you wrote “she thought” or “she said” that would prevent the confusion. I would limit the use of italics for emphasis — don’t make it a habit, where you try to use italics to control the way the character’s voice sounds in the reader’s mind. For me, the choice for thoughts would be between italics and double quotes — in narrative prose there is no established precedent for using single quotes for speech and double quotes for thoughts. You’d have to teach the convention to your readers, and that may distract from your story.

  31. Question: What is the proper punctuation for the character’s thoughts in fiction writing? I’ve heard you can use quotation marks, single quotation marks (which I perfer), or italics (which I don’t like to use).

  32. Pingback: Stearns - Friday! September 14th! College Writing

  33. Your title says it all … I need to learn how to show my characters, not just tell about them. I am attempting to write a story about two manga characters to submit by December – being very unsuccessful.
    In High School, creative writing came easily to me, but then I landed a job in the science world. This meant I learned techincal writing to create protocols.
    Years later, trying to write creatively is non-existent. My descriptions end up simply stating facts, giving readers no feel for the story, and making it feel blah.
    Secondly, I keep switching back and forth between present tense and past tense. My grammar’s been thrown out some window (though maybe it wasn’t that good to begin with)!
    I’ve been reading other great stories written about these two characters and still can not get the swing of it.
    I started searching for books that could possible be of use to me (I learn best by example), and I was wondering if I could impose on you by sending you the first page with my ‘new’ attempt?
    If this is okay with you, how do I send it? Re-writing it onto this post or will it accept a ‘copy and paste’ from my word document to this post?
    Anyway, I need HELP! Any suggestions are better than what I know now. Thanks!

    • While I can’t promise to give detailed feedback on a long section, feel free to post a brief passage where you’ve tried something new or where you’re struggling, and I’ll see what comes to mind.

  34. How do I subtly show that someone (female) isn’t in love with the protagonist (male), but manipulates him with the knowledge that he loves her?

  35. This is a small bit in the short story I’m writing. Can I have some feedback?

    Japan’s dry chilly air suspended outside, occasionally a puff of winter breeze blew and made us shrivel up in our coats, the sky wore a light, empty grey throughout the horizon as we walked through the rows of cramped suburban houses. My grandmother pulled out a small black velvet pouch out of her purse and handed my grandfather, mother, brother and lastly me each a set of Buddhist prayer beads. “Don’t loose them.” She squeezed my hand in an attempt to warm them, but my hands felt a little colder than before. Soon the temple’s distinct roof emerged out of the rest and soon the large old structure of umber wood and silver tiles gradually appeared in front of our eyes. It seemed isolated and detached from its surroundings, bulging out of the crowd of congested Japanese urban housing. We walked through the pale wooden gates of the temple and a small garden dressed with Japanese bonsai pine trees and a small shallow pond that reflected the deep green foliage perfectly. As I peaked into the pond and among the small fishes scattered around, I saw my reflection. Black pants, black shoes and a black coat swayed along in the surface of the silvery water. Was this formal enough? Was this appropriate? My brother called my name in an awkward tone. I looked up and hurried into the temple’s entryway.

    Thanks

    • dry/chilly/winter/coats, air/puff/breeze/blew — trust yourself to set the scene in fewer words. How could you see the horizon if you are surrounded by cramped suburbia? If this is the opening, I would hold off on the precise list of who “we” are, though it was a good idea to try masking the list in the form of action. Maybe instead of listing who got the beads, focus on character. Grandfather at grandmother’s elbow, mother with her nose in a book, father a bit sullen in the background, brother elbowing you out of the way…

      I would not say “My grandmother handed me a Catholic rosary,” I would just call it a rosary… so unless the prayer beads are unfamiliar to your protagonist, just call them prayer beads, and find some other way to specify the religion.

      Lose, not loose…

      How do we know what your grandmother’s intentions are?

      Are we in suburbia, or “urban housing?”

      No need to label the bonsai tree as Japanese — the previous sentence identified the setting. Peeked, not peaked.

      From “pants” I assume the protagonist is a boy, but usually it is girls who assess their looks in a reflection. How much of your shoes can you really see in a reflection in a fish pond? You can see all that just by looking down, but what will really convey emotion is the face (is your protagonist too self-conscious to even look at his/her face?)

      Announcing that the tone of the brother’s voice is awkward is telling. Can you show, instead? Have the brother look at something — a watch, grandfather’s scowling face, the hipster slogan on your T-shirt, the red glowing eye of the robotic cyborg sentry, or whatever — then have the brother bite his lip, to hint to the reader what he is nervous about.

      Or is “awkward” the right word? It seems to say the brother is worried for some unstated reason, but the other lines suggest it should be the protagonist’s worries we focus on.

      I am somewhat intersted in the family dynamic… I always like a little clue as to the child’s age…. Is the protagonist holding mommy’s hand and begging to be picked up by daddy, or rolling his/her eyes and sassing at the parents?

      I get from the grandmother’s cold hands that she will probably die soon, but that may be too obvious. A grandmother’s sudden urge to pass on her heritage may be foreshadowing enough.

  36. Pingback: College Writing - Thursday’s class (6/7) and assignments for Week 2

  37. This is a quick passage from a book I am currently writing. (Any feed back is good just tell me if you can visually see what is going on in this passage and how it makes you feel or how I can make it better).

    A bloodcurdling scream echoed loudly through the empty dark corridors. Jeremy shot up in his bed, his body cold as ice and his face numb. The scream still ringing in his head like a bell, he removed the bed sheets off his body slowly and quietly. He swings his legs over the edge and planted his bare feet on the cold, damp hospital floor. The room he was in was pitch black, additional to no windows present to let in any natural light. He extended his arms and started to move about the floor. His foot taps his shoes just inches away from bed, he quickly picks them up and franticly puts them on his feet and tries to tie them, but his hands were shaking so bad he could barely do that. He ends up stuffing them deep into his shoes. He slowly navigated his way to the door sliding along the wall. He makes it to the door, he reaches for the handle when he hesitates, there was no telling of what was on the other side of that door, or if he’s ready to face it…

    • Try to omit unnecessary description. Any bloodcurdling scream would have to be loud. How else would a scream ring, other than like a bell? Echoes only exist where there is empty space, so we don’t need to be told the corridor is empty if we already know the sound is echoing in it. Ditto for cold/ice/numb/cold. I haven’t spent much time in hospitals, but I’d bet most hospitals have equipment with blinking lights, at least small windows in the doors, and the corridors will always have some light in them because the night nurses will be doing their rounds. So it’s hard for me to accept the total darkness as realistic. Maybe he’s been sedated, or he’s injured, and his disorientation or suffering would make him feel vulnerable.

      Why does he remove his sheet slowly, but get frantic whe he ties his shoes? What does he put into his shoes? The sentence says “them,” but the closest plural noun is “hands,” not “feet.”

      Did you notice your writing switches between past tense and present tense?

      I think you did a good job capturing a mood. Who is Jeremy? Why should the reader care about whatever he’s facing? Caring about Jeremy will make us more engaged in the story about whatever he faces in this creepy environment.

  38. Hi Dennis,
    I’m currently in highschool and i love writing and reading. However I have never gotten above a B. My teacher has been telling me that i need to work on my langauge. I’ve tried but it doesn’t seem to be working. What should i do?

    P.S Your advice on how to involve the reader has been really helpful.

    • Read.

      Read, read, read.

      Magazines, newspapers, the classics of literature, comics, fanfiction, biographies, textbooks, even the front page of Wikipedia.

      It doesn’t matter what, so long as it’s good writing.

  39. Pingback: Why most organizations fail at delivering great customer experiences | Designing Change

  40. I feel like my ideas are good, my story plot is good, but I just cant make my story flow. It sounds choppy and sometimes steers off topic. for example,
    “He looked at me like all hope was lost. I couldn’t bear to stand the fact that I would lose him, but we both knew it would happen. The time that clock struck 12, it was over. I wanted to make these last final hours worth while. I wanted to show him I care. He took my hand and led me off to the edge of the rooftop. I saw him take a deep breath, his chest slowly stretching up, then down in the same fashion. I wanted to tell him I loved him, right then and there, but just couldn’t.” Not sure how that would sound to other people.. but I just don’t think it flows.

    • Rather than TELLING me that his look meant “all hope was lost,” you might instead SHOW me details that let me infer that answer.

      His shoulders sagged, and his eyes wouldn’t meet my gaze. When a gust of wind tipped over the vase on the table between us, neither of us made a move to pick it up. We just watched the water spread out and drip off of the table, the stain on the carpet spreading silently as the clock struck 12. For some reason, he was still holding my hand. I could see him take a deep breath, but he let it out slowly; why wasn’t he speaking? Had I hurt him that badly? Why wasn’t I on my knees, apologizing and telling him that I loved him? Why, of all things, was I thinking of a ham sandwich right now? The sandwich that we had shared — but that I had paid for — on our first date?

      Okay, having the gust of wind conveniently appear just at the right time is a bit cheesy, and I have no idea why a sandwich would matter at this point, but the point is she’s NOT thinking of his kisses, or his eyes, or his arms around her… all that suggests she’s not as in love with him as she would like to be, and maybe he knows it.

      Announcing what his look meant, announcing your inner thoughts, announcing how you felt about the fact that you couldn’t’ speak — those all pull me away from experiencing the scene for myself.

  41. Pingback: “Show, Don’t (Just) Tell” « co·a·les·cence

  42. While writing a short story, how much details in describing the characters and the surroundings is required. When I write, I usually only mention actions and shape up my story. Please read and advice: wagatale.blogspot.com

  43. Pingback: Show, Don’t (Just) Tell — Jerz’s Literacy Weblog « Evangeline Warren

  44. “I disagree,” That’s what MY creative writing teacher told me about show don’t tell.
    “If you only SHOW, time seems to tick on reeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeaaaaaaally slow. For example, my character in my story starts off by eating a cereal and going to school. Who wants a detailed paragraph about walking to school?”

    • I can’t think of any writing rule that’s automatically right (or wrong) 100% of the time.

      The title of this page is not “Show, Don’t Tell.” I chose the title “Show, Don’t (Just) Tell,” specifically because, as your teacher notes, telling is often effective.

      If eating breakfast is not important to your story, then of course the pointless details are a waste of words. But I can imagine a story in which the breakfast scene is a vital clue.

      What if you you start your story with a detailed scene of a character frying something up in a pan, selecting spices and inhaling aromas, setting a place for one at the kitchen table, and settling down and savoring each bite. If so, you are sending a signal to the reader that this scene is somehow important. Whether the SHOWING is successful depends entirely on what happens next in the story.

      Let’s imagine in the next scene, we learn the guy who just finished his breakfast killed someone the night before. His deep involvement in his breakfast could mean he’s totally unaffected by his crime, or maybe he’s in shock and is about to have a mental breakdown.

      Or, if you include a line from a police officer saying some of the victim’s flesh is missing, then in retrospect the breakfast becomes a horror scene… what was it that he was eating?

      The point is not to show randomly, but selectively.

    • In fact, if you were to write about how your character is eating a bowl of cereal and walking to school that means the writer is telling the reader what to see. However, not many writers show how the characters are seeing the world around them.

  45. This is just the type of website that I was looking for to help me in my writing.

    I have a blog where I write a short story every day and was wondering if anyone honest would go on there and give me feedback on my stories so I can improve as a writer.

    Thank you!

  46. Thanks this is helpful but i have a question. After “showing not telling” can we just give away what we were describing? Because sometimes i read stories that use this technique but after reading the description, i still had no clue what they were talking about! Help!!

    • There is no hard and fast rule. In some cases the showing may be obscure and ineffective; in some cases naming whatever you’ve just shown is a waste of words and an insult to the reader’s intelligence. Try it out, find a few people who will be honest with you, and ask what they think.

  47. Hi, I am writing a story and I need to drop little hints that one character is in love with another, without totally giving it away until the end. Can you help???
    thanks.

  48. Pingback: Tips Mengerjakan GgioSoi Missing Scenific Event! | —shunkan no ai…

  49. Hi Dennis, I want to thank you for the tips and to ask you, if I want to become a writer is it better for me to write short stories first, to practice? or should I just go ahead and write a novel?

    thanks.

    • Sculptors start with clay before they invest in buying a slab of marble. Your first work won’t be your best, so it’s probably better to write a lot of short stories first, rather than a single novel. But if you’ve got an idea for a novel that really inspires you, go for it. There is no single correct answer.

  50. I like the plot twist with Sela. I’m not sure I found the ghost part of the story as successful. Typically fantasy tries to do just one thing at a time. A ghost story is creepy because ghosts are not of our world. If you accept a world with selkies, then a ghost seems less extraordinary.

    There is a nice parallel in your story, that the man and woman are both holding a secret from each other, but since nobody doubts the existence of selkies, or wants to destroy a selkie, and we don’t see Sela struggle with a choice between the sea or Martin, there’s not much conflict to keep the plot going.

    This passage is wordy:

    She pulled out a seal’s skin.
    “What is it?” Morgan whispered.
    “It’s a seal’s skin.”

    The reader already knows what it is because you’ve TOLD the reader, so there’s no tension, and no real point to the revelation in the dialogue that follows.

    Why would the selkies abandon one of their babies? I assume it wasn’t an accident, since the other selkies could have followed and tried to get the baby back. When I just did a quick Google search for images of selkies, I got the clear idea that selkies don’t wear clothes under their sealskins, so would a seklie baby be a “bundle”? Would it need any kind of wrappings?

    • The plot was osmmm…

      But I think it could’ve been a lot more better if there’d have been a continuous flow…

  51. Hi again D.!! :) here’s my story … tell me if its good or bad
    The Selkie Child

    Martin threw his net over the side of his fishing boat. It fanned out like a giant spiderweb. As he waited for his net to fill with fish, he watched seals on the rocks. Martin pulled his net in, docked his boat, and began to walk home. When he passed the rocks, he noticed the seals had left a small bundle.

    “It’s a baby girl!” Martin cried. Next to the baby was a seal’s skin.
    “This must be a Selkie baby,” whispered Martin. He had heard fishermen tell tales about beautiful creatures called Selkies. Selkies could change from a seal to a human by shedding their skin.

    Martin cradled the baby in one arm and tucked the seal skin under his coat and ran home. He opened the door and yelled to his wife, “Sela! The sea gave us a baby.”

    Sela scooped the baby out of Martin’s arms and said, “She’s beautiful.”

    “Let’s name her Morgan,” Martin said. “It means a ‘gift from the sea.'”

    Martin did not tell Sela that Morgan was a Selkie child and might want to return to the sea when she grew up. Instead, he locked the little seal skin in a trunk in the attic.

    Morgan grew up to be a beautiful child. Sela and Morgan spent the days swimming while Martin fished. Martin watched Morgan from his boat.

    “She’s almost as good a swimmer as her mother,” Martin said. “I will tell Sela the truth about Morgan as soon as I return from my long fishing trip.”

    The day Martin left for his trip, a storm came up the coast.

    Morgan stared out the kitchen window. “I’d like to go swimming.”

    “You cannot swim during a storm,” Sela said. “It’s too dangerous.”

    “I’m sure it’s peaceful under the waves,” Morgan said.

    The next morning, Sela and Morgan found pieces of Martin’s boat washed up on the beach. Martin never came home.

    That night, another storm came up the coast. When Sela drifted off to sleep she heard a familiar voice whisper, “I can’t rest until I tell you the truth!”

    “Morgan!” Sela whispered with fright. She ran to Morgan’s room. A bolt of lightning lit it up. The bed was empty. Sela searched every room.

    When Sela stopped in front of the attic door, the doorknob slowly turned.

    Trembling, she watched as the door creaked open. She whispered, “Morgan! Morgan! Are you in here?”

    There was no answer, so she quickly shut the door and locked it.

    “Morgan!” Sela cried. The wind was getting stronger. Sela ran down the steps. She peered through the kitchen window and saw Morgan standing on the rocks near the water.

    Sela stumbled through the heavy wet sand on the beach. Thick storm clouds covered the moon.

    “Mama,” Morgan said. “Do you ever feel like you don’t belong here?”

    Sela shook her head and said, “I belong here with you.”

    Morgan and Sela walked back up to the house. When Sela went to the pantry to get Morgan a towel, she heard stomp, stomp, stomp above her.

    “Someone is upstairs,” Sela gasped.

    Creeaakk! Sela knew the attic door was opening.

    Sela lit a candle. They tiptoed up the steps. The attic door was open.

    “Stay here,” Sela told Morgan. Sela stepped inside.

    “Mama!” Morgan cried. She peeked inside the attic.

    Sela stood very still. Something moved.

    A trunk suddenly slid towards her. She reached down and opened it.

    Sela felt something cold and wet inside the trunk. She held it up. She saw a tiny seal’s skin.

    “Come with me!” Sela said. She grabbed Morgan’s trembling hand and led her down three flights of steps to the basement.

    Sela showed her daughter the secret of her past.

    Sela moved a pile of boxes and found a large chest.

    “I hid this here years ago,” Sela explained. She pulled out a seal’s skin.

    “What is it?” Morgan whispered.

    “It’s a seal’s skin,” Sela answered. “I’m a Selkie.”

    “This is your seal skin,” Sela showed Morgan the smaller skin. “Your father must have known you were a Selkie. He just didn’t know how to tell me.”

    Sela explained how she had fallen in love with Morgan’s father when she was young. She hid her seal skin from him and gave up her seal life. “I always longed for the sea,” Sela said to Morgan, “but I could never leave you. Tonight you will see just how peaceful it is under the waves.”

    Sela and Morgan ran to the beach and slipped into their seal skins. As they swam, they saw a familiar boat drifting along with the tide.

    “Look, Mama,” Morgan whispered. “It looks like Papa’s boat.”

    Sela and Morgan thought they could see Martin’s boat out on the water.

    Sela looked up and saw the ghostly figure of her husband standing on the boat’s deck. A wave splashed over Sela and Morgan. When they wiped the water out of their eyes, the boat was gone.

    The End!
    so what do yea think Dennis? hope u answer me soon! xD thanks
    ~ Rachel R.

  52. I had a professor tell me not to show, but to tell. Being the young student that I was, I burned that into my mind. Now that I’ve ran into other professors and writers, I learend that I was taught some very bad habits and that I was on the right track the first time.

    Sadly, it’s hard to untrain something like that and it’s really hurt my writing. No matter how much I think I’ve gotten better, I still naturally tell and not show. I don’t know how long it’s going to take me to untrain a habit that has crippled my writing because I simply can’t get away from what I’ve been taught.

    I would like to extend a large middle-finger to Edison Community College for bad instruction on a hobby that I hold most dear to me. How such a college became a State College after I left, I will never know.

    • Depending on the occasion, the needs of the audience, and your goals as a writer, telling can be quite effective. If you are writing warning labels, for instance, or legal documents, or a course syllabus, telling is more efficient and accurate. Showing is usually better at engaging the emotions, of course.

  53. I totally understand the points you make but I fear my consice style of writing hamstrings my descriptive pieces. Example, i wrote a small Tolkien type setting where my MC walked into an inn. I said the fire was dwindling but didn’t show them. The reason I didn’t is because I didn’t deem it fundamental or important to the movement of the story. However, the reason for it dwindling was to keep the light to a minimum and to keep those unseen patrons to remain unseen. Hum, I think I’ve answered my question. I did say to a friend that the fire need slight clarification but I still felt it to be unimportant.

    Also, my imagination needs no guidance and thus I don’t really like being spoon fed to much information. Is that naive thought process? And if I were to write so would it mean i tell more than I show?

    Matt..

    • Well, there you go. “Don’t just tell” does not mean “always show everything.” You told a less-important detail that showed something about the setting that would later be important.

  54. Pingback: Writing Index — Jerz's Literacy Weblog

  55. Hi! I’m a high school writing skills teacher in Mexico City and I’m constantly searching for ideas to help my kids improve their writing. All of your blog is like a candy store of ideas and advice, not only this wonderful Show vs. Tell section and it’s the best and most useful I’ve found. Absolutely outtasite! (you may guess my
    age by the groovy expression!) Thanks for your generous sharing!

  56. Thank you so much for this website. I am in the process of writing a personal statement for my residency application. I’ve always hated forcing someone to read a boring paper, and often looked for a way to add flair to my assignments. I don’t just want a personal statement, I want a literary work that is engaging and offers a piece of myself to the reader—after all, these poor guys have to read hundreds of statements. You have taught me many helpful facts; the most important being that a wonderful work is often preceded by gobs and gobs of drafts! Your examples are marvelous. I have been able to go back to my writing and objectively judge its “showing-factor” with much success. I can’t believe something this helpful is free! Keep on doing this, Brother.

  57. Pingback: Weekly Diigo Posts (weekly) « The Reading Zone

  58. THANK YOU. For some reason, I have had a bizarre block when it came to “Show Don’t Tell.” In fact, I can explain it well…and when I write a scene I am conscious of it and think I’ve conquered my Achilles Heel (I know, I know – CLICHE) but then I’m told I’ve “told too much.” I think your article and your examples are great models and I plan on using it as a resource when I write the FINAL revision on the demon that has been slapping me around for TEN years. :)
    Feel free to email me if you can….I want to fill you in on more that I don’t want to publish here publicly. THANKS AGAIN

  59. Thanks for your detailed comments, HRKelley.

    “showing us a child was tired, and we assumed in our mind because we’re brilliant that she needed a nap” — While I don’t believe it takes brilliance to make that connection, yes, an author who assumes the reader is intelligent enough to make that connection is keeping the reader foremost in mind, and that’s an improvement over writing that either 1) announces feelings, or 2) uses details for the sake of details.

    The questions you raise, whether the person grieving over the dog feeds it every day or whether this is the first day after his death; whether the child who needs the nap is being bratty or simply playing aggressively; these very questions are only possible because SHOWING presents so many opportunities for the reader to interpret, which means there are more points for the reader to interact with, and the writing accomplishes something other than merely transferring data.

    If I hadn’t announced what I thought the Fido or sleepy child examples were supposed to TELL, you would have gotten “That’s a touching moment” or “That child is misbehaving” out of the examples, and those are perfectly legitimate responses. In order to demonstrate the process, I announced what I was planning to communicate, but I’d rather you engage with my writing and come up with your own meaning, even if that meaning does not map entirely to what I’d intended.

    Your responses to my examples of SHOWING perfectly illustrate the kind of deep reader response that I hope my students will shoot for when they SHOW a smaller number of carefully-selected points, rather than TELL a long list of details.

  60. To simplify my extremely long post

    To Show does not require a lot of extra descriptive words. You simply need the right descriptive words told in a way which causes the reader to visualize a scene in their own mind. Please don’t go back over all your writing and turn each sentence into a paragraph or entire chapter because you are trying to Show the reader something which you were Telling them before. If you’re original sentence was “The child was tired and needed a nap.” change it to “Her head nodded slowly up and down as she tried to watch her favorite cartoon.” That’s it. Don’t add in a sword or helmet plz lol. You just went from telling us a child was tired and needed a nap, to showing us a child was tired, and we assumed in our mind because we’re brilliant that she needed a nap if that’s where you’re going with it.

    • “Her head nodded slowly up and down as she tried to watch her favorite cartoon.” is not showing. That merely tells us a different aspect on how a child can be tired. Every child is different and the way every child gets tired will be different. It also already tells us ‘she tried to watch’ when you wrote ‘her head nodded slowly up and down.’ You say not to be ‘wordy.’ Wouldn’t it be better to write ‘Her head bobbed’ or something of the sort?

    • Not to mention, you missed the point. Did you see the picture of the girl posted above? Our writing is supposed to paint a picture like that with our own flare. So a tired girl really did have a viking helmet on. You can tell she is tired from the circles under her eyes.

  61. I kind of like this post. It does do a good job helping people understand the difference between “Show” and “Tell”. But on a personal note I believe many authors think that Show means to overly draw out and add much more description than is needed to make a point. Take your first example of the sleepy child who needs a nap. “She sat in front of the television set, her head sinking slowly down then suddenly jerking up as her mother watched on from the couch.” This is all that needs to be said to give you a good visual of a child that needs a nap, of Showing that a child is sleepy and not Telling. All the extra description of the sleepy brown eyes hardened into red-rimmed slits, viking helmet, sword, decapitated lollipop, and the dialogue which was very clearly added to point out that someone was trying to make her take a nap, was not only unnecessary but actually hurts the point you’re trying to get across and distracts the reader. I don’t see a child that needs a nap, I see a brat who needs a slap and less candy even though the author “told” me her eye’s were sleepy… To turn Telling into Showing you do not need to add all of the extra description that most authors add, you simply need to give a visualization of what you want the reader to know. If every author took an idea as simple as “This child needs a nap” and turned it into what happened in this post, our agents and editors brains are going to explode when they start getting 1500 page manuscripts lol. For the Fido post this is all that’s needed. “Every morning I reach over to feel the pillow where his small soft body used to greet me but all I feel are the dull cold sheets which cover my bed. Then, all over again, I realize Fido’s gone.” Your “good” post for Fido didn’t even show how the man was miserable after Fido died, it just told a touching overly drawnout moment where he was sad about Fido’s death. I don’t know who wrote those, but Show does not mean to add in a bunch of stuff that isn’t necessary and ends up being a distraction. Fido being jealous doesn’t show how the man’s miserable because of his death. The visual of the man feeding the dog and then realizing he’s gone doesn’t either. It’s just a visual of a man getting sad at one moment, and it is very touching, but he doesn’t feed his dead dog everyday. Or at least it doesn’t Show me that he does and is miserable because of it.

  62. Mr Jerz, many a short story I have shelved because something went wrong that i couldn’t figure out. Your blog pointed them all out. It’s liberating!

    cheers!

  63. Truly a great lesson on ‘Showing, not Telling’. This is by far the clearest explanation I have found on the internet. The examples provided are nice illustrations of the difference in the two approaches. Thank you so much for this post. I am grateful to people like you who are willing to share their expertise with others. Be blessed!

  64. Pingback: Essay Fun: Day 3

  65. Pingback: herrlarbig.de » Blog Archiv » Kreatives Schreiben in der Schule

  66. Writing newbie. I just learned the “show not tell” maxim in a writing class. It made sense to me and these examples are very helpful. Is there ever a style using “showing” examples and then the last paragraph “reflecting in the author’s voice on the theme? I suppose pastor’s do it in sermons but I don’t want to preach. Is there ever a good reason to use that as a style or is it always weaker?

    • In modern fiction, it’s not common to reftect in the author’s voice, but the Series of Unfortunate Events books created a fictional author to do the reflecting, and it was very effective. Your mileage may vary.

  67. Like most, I was struggling with what I consider to be the most difficult part of fiction writing: showing vs telling. Your article with so many specific examples gave me really useful perspective. More importantly, it motivates me to make a conscious effort to replace the “telling” in my writing with more imaginative “showing”!

    I could have as well said ” Great tips on showing vs telling” but I hope I am learning to show rather than tell:)

    Thanks, Dennis, for this terrific post!

  68. thanks mr Jerz for your tips, am so impressed to get them.they will help me a lot to write my fiction story.

  69. Pingback: Troy Sterling and the Active and Passive Verbs — Jerz's Literacy Weblog

  70. Thanks so much for writing these. I’m part of a ‘write-and-edit’ circle (who despite devoting vast swathes of time to words can’t come up with a better name for ourselves) at school, and I’ve just been given my first work to edit. These posts are like signposts to the things that can be improved, but put into words even a student at 2am can understand. Again, I thank you.

  71. im currently writting short stories and i find this info useful so much so that i couldnt have reached where i am right now without it.thanks a lot

  72. Pingback: viralsocialmarketing.com » How Your Worst Enemy Can Become the Key to Your Blogging Authority

  73. Pingback: Showing vs. Telling #1

  74. This is great advice, and I use it as a link for my creative writing class. There’s just one itty-bitty issue I have with it. You use the word “lame” in the beginning of this, and while I know this word has found its way into our contemporary venacular, it can still be very offensive to people with disabilities (as its original meaning is “weak-limbed” or “broken”). I never usually comment on things like this, but I hate to see such a good resource start on such a negative note.

    • Thanks for your note, Amanda. I think of that word in the context of “lame duck” — it’s not a word I would apply to people, but that doesn’t exonerate me. I do use the words “blind” and “deaf” metaphorically because they are everywhere in literature, and I do point out to my students the physical bias we see in children’s movies (where a scar, the disfigurement, extra weight, or a large nose is typically a marker of evil). I will revise that word.

  75. Wow this thing is of real help……thanks for posting this…
    My sis sent me the link… keep up the good work

  76. I love your writing tips, I run sessions on creative writing for the National Health Service in England and I have seacrched hundreds of websites in my time, your blogs are definately the best I have encountered. Thank you very much

Leave a Reply to Showing vs. Telling #1 Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *