This month’s theme may be an easier one for our paranormal or suspense writers. In my case, I’ll have to put a different spin on it than you might expect. The scariest scenes I’ve ever written are ones that were scary for me emotionally.
You’ve probably heard the quote, commonly attributed to Ernest Hemingway. According to Quote Investigator (https://quoteinvestigator.com/2011/09/14/writing-bleed/), it was probably first said by Walter Wellesley (Red) Smith: “Red Smith was asked if turning out a daily column wasn’t quite a chore. …'Why, no,' dead-panned Red. 'You simply sit down at the typewriter, open your veins, and bleed.'" Whoever said it first, there is some truth to it.
To put their characters’ emotions on the page, writers must access their own. Maybe I haven’t been in that person’s exact situation, but I need to recall something like it to capture what the character is feeling at that moment. That can be tough to do, and scary to open yourself up and be so vulnerable.
I’ve put my characters through a lot of negative emotions over the years, including fear, disappointment, anger, and grief. Which means I’ve had to go through all that, too. Here’s an excerpt from a scene in Golden Days that was hard for me to write, as I had to access grief. Elizabeth’s mother has just died:
Days slipped by as people came over to pay their respects before the funeral. Elizabeth was numb at times, and heartsick at times. Waves of sadness crashed over her as she held on to Papa or Mrs. Thompson. She got used to wearing black, which suited her mood anyway. She tried to be strong for Victoria, let her cry on her lap or hold her hand. She missed Mama already, and the whole thing was so unfair. But she knew the best course was to keep plowing through.
I hope I’ve done it well enough for the reader to empathize with my character. That’s one of my goals in writing. Books can help us understand each other and remember we’re all human.
May your own emotions be more positive than negative, and you have someone to help you through the tough days. Take care of yourself.
Lynn Lovegreen has lived in Alaska for over fifty years. After twenty years in the classroom, she retired to make more time for writing. She enjoys her friends and family, reading, and volunteering at her local library. Her young adult historical fiction is set in Alaska, a great place for drama, romance, and independent characters. See her website at www.lynnlovegreen.com. You can also find her on Facebook and Instagram.
5 comments:
Your last paragraph is beautifully written. Thank you for those words.
May your own emotions be more positive than negative, and you have someone to help you through the tough days. Take care of yourself.
You're welcome, Judith. I know we all have tough days.
Lynn
It is so true that to put emotions on the page you have to revisit a time in your own life when those emotions were strong. It is hard to write about anger, grief, fear if you haven't experienced it. As a reader, I can always tell when someone has lived through those difficult emotions and capture it. Those who haven't rely on what they've seen on TV or in a movie, or perhaps well-worn pharses they've read in other books.
I often come away from a difficult, emotional scene I've written with tears in my eyes or a lump in my throat. I know it works when I go back later and read that scene again after the book is published and I still get the same visceral response.
It works the same way for emotional scenes that are uplifting after a many challenges the hero or heroine have faced. I might still cry, but they are joyful tears of relief and celebration. There have been a couple of books that at the HEA I am so happy I've had to dance a little jib in my room to celebrate.
Keep writing those emotional, scary stories and your readers will flock to buy them.
Thanks, Maggie. Good point about those joyful scenes--I love crying those tears! :-)
Lynn
Completely agree that we are doing our job best if we feel the characters emotions very intensely AND can have our readers feeling that same intensity of emotion.
Agree with Maggie that I feel best when I bring myself to tears and then can read the same scene much later and still get that same emotional hit.
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