4 Compelling Ways to Write Emotion

Greetings readers! Today I’m posting an update of a post I wrote in 2012. Enjoy!

One of the easiest things to write badly is emotion.

Long after a writer has learned to create interesting characters, construct strong plots, invent believable settings, and come up with convincing dialogue, she might still be writing sentences like, “Marissa felt really, really angry” or “Jake was happy as a clam.”

 

It wasn’t until multiple writing teachers had commented on my tendency to describe my characters’ feelings with boring words like “cheerful” and “depressed” that I began to make a serious study of how excellent writers depict emotions. What I found was that, while writing emotion may be easy to screw up, it’s also easy to fix, if you know a few simple techniques.

Here are four ways to depict emotion in your writing, with examples from some of the best writers around.

Show emotion through action.

This is the simplest way to transform a boring description of what someone is feeling into a vivid and memorable scene. Bharati Mukherjee doesn’t use the word “angry” anywhere in this sentence from Desirable Daughters, but we have no trouble knowing what her character, Rabi, is feeling:

He stormed out of the room, took the steep, creaky stairs two at a time, and left the house, slamming the front door so hard behind him that he probably didn’t her my plaintive, “Rabi, wear something warmer.”

Use metaphor.

Rather than saying what the emotion is, say what it is like. This is what Andre Dubus does here in his story “Dancing after Dark,” about a high school literature teacher:

She taught without confidence or hope, and felt like a woman standing at a roadside, reading poems aloud into the wind as cars filled with teenagers went speeding by.
Dubus starts this depiction with a description, but it’s the analogy that packs the punch (and speaking as one who used to teach literature to very bored teenagers, I can tell you this is exactly what it feels like).

Express it through dialogue.

This doesn’t mean your characters should come out and tell each other what they are feeling, as in: “I’m so excited I could burst,” Elizabeth said.  It means asking yourself what conversation your characters would have, given their emotions.

Marya Hornbacher captures a world of emotion in a very simple, rather ordinary conversation in The Center of Winter, and she does it without either character saying anything about what he or she is feeling. In this scene a young girl’s mentally ill brother has been institutionalized, and she has just gotten his bicycle for Christmas:

I said thank you and began to cry, for reasons of which I was not aware.
 
“Oh, now. Say now,” said my father. He came over and sat next to me on the floor, rubbing my back with his hand. “See here.
 
“It’s not the bike,” I said, wiping my face with the heels of my hands. “I love the bike.”
 
“No, of course not. It’s everything, “ he said.
 
“It’s just everything.”

Use setting.

Most writers know how important setting is, but it’s amazing how many forget to use it when they start focusing on characters’ emotions. In editing my own work, I often find that my first drafts have scenes in which my characters are emoting away with no reference to where they are doing it, as if they’re floating around in an empty space. Using setting as a backdrop for emotion is probably the most difficult of the techniques discussed here, because it’s easy to fall into cliché (can’t anyone be frightened or lonely on a sunny day?) But, done skillfully, it can be stunningly effective, as in Isaac Bashevis Singer’s “The Letter Writer.” Here, a old man is lying in bed too ill to move. He lives alone, and no one knows he is sick:

Herman opened his eyes, and the day was just beginning—an overcast wintry day that he could barely make out through the front-covered windowpanes. It was as cold indoors as out.  . . From the hallway he heard sounds of shouting and running free.

What works here is the contrast. It isn’t just the cold of the man’s room that evokes his despair, but the sound of people just outside it—people just a few feet away who cannot hear or see him.

Try this: Write about a grief, an embarrassment, or an annoyance in one sentence, without using a single emotion word. Try it four different ways, using each of the techniques discussed in this post.

How do you show emotion in your writing? What techniques have you used? What has worked and what hasn’t? Share them here!

 

Photo credit: © Konstantynov | Dreamstime.com – Happy Woman Holding Her Sad Picture Photo

6 comments

  1. These concise, succinct suggestions are just what the doctor ordered for those of us who struggle with conveying emotions through our writing. Describing a character’s body language (which sort of dovetails with your Action suggestion) seems like a good technique as well: slumped shoulders; bolted upright in their chair; trembling hands; fingers repeatedly drumming on the table, etc

  2. Last night I was writing a scene where I wanted to show hesitation coming from both characters in the setting. I ended up having one folding her hands in her lap with her head bent but still looking at the other person. With the other one, I had her looking expectantly at the other one hoping that person would speak. It seems as though I’m always trying to find ways the express emotion in my scenes.

    1. Writing a scene with two characters showing hesitation sounds like quite a challenge! It sounds like you found quite a compelling way to depict it, Glynis.

Leave a comment