Monday, November 20, 2017

Tips for Writing with Emotion

Janet here. Writers all know how important emotion is in our stories. Emotion draws readers in and makes them care about the characters. Once they do, they'll keep reading to find out what happens on their journey. 

The hard part is getting that emotion on the page. Some writers study craft books and posts and attend workshops on writing emotion. Others have torn a well-loved book apart, examining how the writer brought them to tears or laughter. With all these resources available to us, why is writing strong emotion difficult? At least it is for me.  

Perhaps it's because there's no quick and easy way to get it done. To write an emotional story that will elicit emotion in ourselves, in our characters and in our readers takes time and effort. 




To prime the pump and keep the emotion flowing, I need to dig deep into myself, into my story and into my characters.     
  • Dig deep into our characters. We have to figure out who the characters are and what makes them tick. To do that, we need to know what has wounded them and what they desperately want and why. Fleshed-out characters, just like real people, come with emotional baggage. That baggage skews their view of themselves, of others and of their world. When we know our characters inside and out, we can take them on an emotional journey that will heal their hurts and allow them to move on with their lives. Sometimes I have to write the first chapter, even the first three chapters, before I figure out who my characters are. Once I know them really well, I may have to go back and rework the opening to make it fit how they would react and why.  
  • Dig deep into ourselves. We may not have experienced what our characters have, but most of us have experienced grief, disappointments and hardships and can use the feelings those things brought us when writing our stories. To do this requires being vulnerable and that's scary, even painful. But when we tap into our wounds, our concerns, our relationship with others and with God, all those things that have impacted or hurt us, we can use that emotion when writing our stories. The closer story events come to our real lives, the more uncomfortable the writing may be. I wrote a scene in The Bride Wore Spurs where the heroine's father died. My father had died seven years earlier. Perhaps I hadn't dealt with my grief, but I found myself weeping as I wrote the scene and every time I read or revised it. My editor's comment proved that I'd allowed myself to bleed on the page and the emotion was real.
  • Dig deep into our story. We want to write stories that matters. The story should have a takeaway or truth that lingers long after our readers closed the book. When we have a strong passion for our the theme or takeaway, we'll find writing with emotion is easier. Gripping stories with high stakes and characters experiencing universal fears make readers identify with the characters, even become them. If we aren't emotionally involved in our stories, our readers probably won't be either.   
Once the pump is primed, we can utilize craft techniques to help produce emotion. Unless stated otherwise, all excerpts are from The Bounty Hunter's Redemption.  

I believe some writers are intuitive about how to elicit emotion. If you're one of those, you may want to skip to the end of the post. The rest of us may need to study craft for ways to produce emotion in the reader. Telling the emotion is often the first attempt at getting emotion on the page. She felt afraid doesn't create that emotion of fear in the reader. The snake of fear slithered along her spine is a bit more eerie, but still telling the emotion. The character whose head we're in needs to show the fear she's feeling through her thoughts, descriptions, actions and reactions. Other characters may see that emotion in another character and describe it. Vivid, pertinent details are the building blocks of storytelling. Vivid details of the setting and of the characters bring scenes alive and connect readers emotionally to the story.



  • Physical Reactions: One of these techniques is describing the characters' physical reactions (things like clenched fists and racing hearts) either through their own eyes or the eyes of another. Overdo these descriptions and we risk annoying the reader. On the flip side, we can have our characters suppress physical reactions, such as refusing to cry. When we know our characters, we know how they'll react in a given situation. We can make physical reactions like laughing and crying feel fresh by adding a few select words as in this excerpt from my novella "A Daddy for Christmas": Miss Mae tried to trap a snicker behind a gloved hand and failed. We can add emotion by embellishing as in this excerpt with Carly describing Anna's physical reactions on the witness stand: Tears brimmed then spilled down Anna’s cheeks, the anguish of reliving that nightmare plain on her face. The room was so quiet Carly could hear each ragged breath Anna took. 


  • Descriptions: When a character describes another character, instead of just giving hair and eye color, for instance, use the opportunity to show the character's emotional state, as in this excerpt: A woman stood between Nate Sergeant and a young boy like a petite, beautiful fortress. Pink lips, flushed cheeks, her fair complexion in sharp contrast to her coal-black hair, the delicate female couldn't outweigh a hundred-pound bag of grain. Under slashing brows, dazzling blue eyes met his, sizing him up, her expression wary, alert.
  • Introspection/Thoughts: Characters can remember painful or joyful events, have emotionally-charged flashbacks, react emotionally in their thoughts to what's going on around them and make decisions for what action they'll take next. We need to be careful when writing introspection not to tell, saying things like, he felt angry. It's easier to show emotion when we Intersperse action, reaction and introspection. If we overdo the length and frequency of introspection, we'll slow the pace. In this scene from "A Daddy for Christmas" Rafe decides his course of action: 
    As he tramped to the livery in the moonlight, Rafe thought about his daughter, an innocent in all this. Too young to understand what had transpired. But one day she’d grow up, and when she did, she’d wonder why her father hadn’t cared enough to stick around, hadn’t cared enough to risk loving her. 
    For the grownup Josie’s sake, he would take this chance and try to be a good dad to his daughter. Anyone planning to stop him had better move aside. 
       
  • Action: Select actions for your characters to take that will elicit emotion in the characters and in readers, as in this excerpt from "A Daddy for Christmas", Rafe has just left an encounter with his father: 
    Rafe forced his fisted hand to turn the knob and stepped outside, softly closing the door behind him. He leaned against it, gulping the cold December air like a drowning man. 
     
    Tense action scenes with high stakes keep emotion running high. This is not the time for lengthy introspection. Instead use short sentences with strong verbs, as in this excerpt: Stogsdill whirled, slamming into the muzzle of the gun. The motion jerked her backward. Her finger slipped in a reflexive squeeze on the trigger. With a deafening boom, the Smith and Wesson fired
    .  
  • Dialogue: When characters say harsh things, surprising things, shocking things, their words carry an emotional wallop. In "A Daddy for Christmas" these are Tess's words to a guilt-ridden Rafe: He ambled toward them, scanning the store, and then stopped before her father. “I’m sorry about your loss, sir. So sorry about Vi.” His Adam’s apple convulsed. “I’m to blame for her death.”                                                                            “Easy enough to apologize,” Tess said. “You didn’t sit at her bedside and watch her draw her last breath.”                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              Better yet, we can reveal truth and fuel emotion by having the character's words clash with their thoughts or actions.  

  • Setting:  We want the setting to feel real, to ground the story in place and time, but it's how the characters see the setting and the emotion it triggers that makes setting a powerful tool for emotional writing. The setting is not just location and time period, it's anything tangible in the story. In this excerpt, I used elements of the setting to show Carly's feelings about her dead husband.: Though the air carried the scent of mowed grass, spring flowers and fresh-turned dirt, the vile odors that had clung to Max filled her nostrils still, as if he stood at her side, not laid out at her feet. Setting can also be used as an analogy or metaphor, as in this excerpt: Gnaw Bone Christian Church cast a morning shadow, the steeple’s silhouette pointing right at Nate like the finger of God.       
  • Symbols: A cowboy hat Nate gave Henry is used to show Henry's feelings toward Nate, as in this excerpt: Nate stared at Henry’s Stetson lying there in the mud. Discarded, soiled, unwanted.    
These tips are tools, not a magical formula. Writers usually combine these techniques, as in this excerpt inside Carly's head that gives Henry's description, dialogue, action, reaction, and ends with her introspection:


Henry, his dark brown hair lifting in the gentle breeze, pointed to the hole in the ground. “Is Pa staying in there?”

Carly met his troubled eyes; eyes far too old for one so young. “Yes. Your pa’s passed on.”

“Like our old hound dog? Pa ain’t coming back?”

“That’s right.”

Her son gave a nod then stepped to the dirt piled at the edge of the grave and stomped the soil with his scuff-toed shoe.

Once. Twice. Three times.

Henry pivoted back to her, lips quivering, eyes welling with tears. “He can’t hurt you now, Mama.”

The heartbreaking truth sank to Carly’s belly like a stone. Henry had not forgotten the last time his father had returned home. The first time Max had slapped her with more than words. The force of the blow had knocked her to the floor, terrifying her son.



If you're feeling brave, share a one-two sentence excerpt from a manuscript or book you've written or have read that triggered an emotional response in you. One person leaving a comment will win a $10 Amazon gift card and an eCopy of "A Daddy for Christmas."

For breakfast, I brought coffee and tea, apple fritters, hard-boiled eggs and oatmeal. 


Janet Dean grew up in a family who cherished the past and had a strong creative streak. Her father recounted fascinating stories, like his father before him. The tales they told instilled in Janet a love of history and the desire to write. Janet is a two-time Golden Heart finalist, Genesis and Carol finalist and a member of Romance Writers of America and American Christian Fiction Writers. Her Love Inspired Historical novels are also Golden Quill, Gayle Wilson Award of Excellence, Booksellers Best, Inspirational Readers Choice Award and Holt Medallion finalists. 



When Rafe Rafferty discovers he’s a father, he returns to Bountiful, Indiana, to marry the mother, only to learn she died after childbirth and her sister Tess is raising his child. Rafe falls head over heels for his daughter and for Tess Russo, a woman who doesn’t trust easily. Especially the man she thinks abandoned her sister. Can Rafe prove he’s worthy and conquer the protective walls she’s built around her heart?

95 comments :

  1. You nailed it Janet, and it is totally HARD WORK. This is the most difficult thing for me next to PLOT.

    No tears in the writer, no tears in the reader. No surprise in the writer, no surprise in the reader. Robert Frost

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    1. Tina, you and I must have the same writer's gene with that plot and emotion mutation. :-) But with prayer and hard work, we get it done! Thanks for sharing the quote. It's perfect for the post!

      Janet

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  2. I love this! I don't have my bookshelf with me on vacation this week, so I can't share some of my favorites, but I know that Ruthy, Jan Drexler, and Tina have all brought me to tears in their stories.

    And since it's late and I'm relaxed and warm (did I mention vacation? ha!), I'll be brave and share one of mine from one of my earliest stories. It's in the shoved-in-the-back-of-a-drawer-until-I-can-emotionally-deal-with-gutting-it category, but it also brought the strongest emotion out of me when I wrote it:

    Her teddy bear splayed out on the tile with one side of his synthetic fur melted black. She pulled him to her chest. Tears pooled in the corners of her eyes, blurring the lifeless bodies of the only grown-ups who had ever loved her.

    And I have now sat here staring at this for several minutes working up the nerve to post... It's amazing how vulnerable we can be when we write with emotion!

    Ok. Here goes.......

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    1. Megan... what an excerpt. Absolutely wonderful. The only thing I'd lose is the "in the corners of her eyes" because tears pooled says enough to segue into what she's seeing right now.

      You had me at hello.

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    2. Megan, thank you for sharing! You've painted such an emotional picture with only two lines. Great job!

      Janet

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    3. Thanks for the advice, Ruthy! I'm striking through the extra words right now for when I go back to revise :)

      And thank you too, Janet! You ladies are so encouraging!

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    4. Megan, it's sometimes hard to delete words we've written, but the great part...we can always write more!

      Janet

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  3. This is just the first line from Irene Hannon's newest suspense novel "Dangerous Illusions" that I read the other day:
    ”Hello Matt. Long time no see.” As the words slithered through the clammy night air, a jagged shaft of lightning illuminated the speaker’s face for one brief instant.

    Now if that doesn't hook you right from the start and send chills down your spine, I don't know what will! She doesn't let go until the end, building the story up until it crescendos to a heart-stopping conclusion! Irene is one of those authors who can draw your emotions out by her vivid sentences & connect you to her characters on a deeper level. I think she's one of the perfect examples you are talking about here Janet. It's one of the reasons she is one of my must-read authors :-)

    I'll say it another thousand times, connect me to your characters and bring out the emotions and you'll have me begging for more from you...in other words, a reader for life! Reading this, I envisioned sitting around a table with a bowl of popcorn while you were up front teaching a writing class. I could definitely learn a thing or two from you Janet :-)

    Please toss my name in the pot for your book & card, thanks so much!

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    1. Trixi, Irene is a pro! Thanks for sharing her suspenseful opening lines with slithered, clammy and jagged set the mood. Thanks for sharing and validating the importance of emotion in our storytelling.

      The image of a class with everyone munching popcorn just makes me smile. Wish we could do it! You're such a savvy reader. I think you could be the one up front.

      Janet

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  4. “Staring across the hallway of the dilapidated farmhouse at the shut door of Eliza’s room, I wrestled in my spirit. I didn’t know what to ask God for.” - J Rodes from “Charging the Darkness”
    Thanks for the great post. Digging into these emotions really do make a huge difference to the readers!

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    1. Good morning, MH. Thanks for sharing the lines from Charging the Darkness, an interesting title. There's a strong sense of desperation in not knowing what to ask God for. The word choice the author used is strong.

      Janet

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  5. Thanks for this fantastic post, Janet. It's a keeper! I'm off to work, so I'll be thinking about your question during my commute. :)

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    1. I love that you head off to work, too! :) Who says we can't spin an extra plate or two???

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    2. Jill, have a great day! See you later.

      Janet

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  6. Janet, this is a good post and so worthy of being reminded of. (Grammar Queen would have A Field Day with that sentence.) Emotion is hard for me, a lifelong New Englander, and something I must constantly work on. It's frequently brought up by contest judges.
    My best tip for myself and others? Deep POV. If you're in Deep POV and your character feels something, your reader will too.
    Here's a snippet from my Oregon Trail story where Michael discovers Caroline's baby, lost at birth, was actually his.

    "But Michael’s grasp tightened on her. “Daniel’s baby? It was Daniel’s, wasn’t it?”
    She was too tired for pretense.
    “No, Michael. If you’d been there and done the ciphering, you’d have known it was
    yours.”
    He shook her until the last of her hairpins fell out and her hair streamed across her
    shoulders. “You’re lying.”
    She was weeping again, her tears mixing with the rain. “It’s true. I never lied to you
    then, and I won’t lie to you now. He was yours, Michael, and Daniel married me to keep me
    from that shame, too.”

    Emotion from other writers? Plenty, but the one that comes to mind this morning is in Ruthy's Kirkwood Lake stories when the patriarch and his wife faced the fact he was dying. powerful.


    Will be back later I hope.
    Kathy Bailey

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    1. Kathy, writing the series and knowing that Charlie was going to die helped pack emotion into each book, layer on layer... I wasn't sure how it would happen initially, or even when... but I knew as I wrote the stories that we would lose Charlie Campbell so that helped me to create a good, strong, simple patriarch... and having gone through cancer with my mother and Alzheimer's with my beloved father-in-law, I had a heart full of emotion to use.

      Thank you for your kind words. I loved Charlie and the Campbell family. Still do. :)

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    2. Kathy, thanks for sharing! The rain fits the mood of the confrontation. Excellent. My only concern, assuming Michael is the hero, is how much he's shaking her. Yet it's a highly charged moment so it's believable and editors might allow it. I'm always thinking about editors.

      Ruthy is not afraid to tackle the tough things in her books and that gives her readers an emotional story.

      Janet

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    3. Janet, I think Ruthy is another example of a great writer! As I was typing my comment last night, I also thought of the Double S Ranch series and how she tackles some pretty rough stuff in the characters lives. She connected me to each one in turn :-)

      Ruthy, we readers love you!!! Keep on keeping on

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  7. I loved this post Janet, thank you. So many times I have been driven to tears when reading a book. This excerpt is from Ruthy's Peace in the Valley, "Cade found her before she found him. He came dashing into the front of the barn and threw himself at her. 'Trey's feeling better! I knew it! I knew it all the time, that he wanted to come back to us and it was hard, and so I kept telling God to help him, to show him the way back, and he did it. He did it Mom!'" This brought me to tears when I read the book because all the feelings that had been stirred up throughout the book spewed forth in this little guys words.

    I love it when an author can stir up my feelings and make me care about the characters and the outcome of the story. Thank you again for this post.

    Blessings,
    Cindy W.

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    1. Oh, dagnabbit, you made me tear-eyed reading MY OWN WORDS!!!!

      I'm such a sap.

      Loving little Cade brought all that emotion to that scene you picked, Cindy. How he yearned for a dad, for a normal life, to be able to be a boy, a little cowboy. Gosh, I loved that kid. :) And he brought that full circle so wonderfully....

      "...and a child shall lead them..." Isaiah 11:1-11, such a beautiful prophecy of faith, then hope, then love and peace.

      Thank you, dear Cindy! Your words made me smile... and get sappy! Perfect!

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    2. Cindy, thanks for sharing the heart of Cade in Ruthy's beautiful scene! When readers care about the characters, the emotion is strong. Kids are a great way to up the emotional stakes in our stories.

      Hugs, Janet

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    3. I remember reading that scene too...all the emotion Ruthy built up culminated in that one precious moment! Yep, she had me bawling too...lol!!

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  8. Great post, Janet! For me, it seems like I ramp up the emotion in the rewrite, mostly in the second pass through a scene.

    At that point, the direction of the scene / story is clear and I can turn those telling details into showing.

    Sometimes I get in the zone and nail some great emotional stuff in the first round, but not always.

    And sometimes it occurs on the 3rd, 4th, or even 10th pass! :) Or even when fresh eyes point out a great place to add emotion to the page.

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    1. Pam, you make a great point. Getting emotion on the page is an ongoing effort. It may take a while, but before we hit send, we want the emotion strong.

      Janet

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  9. Thank you for your post, Janet!

    One of my favorite quotations on writing I have posted around my desk to help me remember to dig deep into emotion.

    It's by George Addair: "Everything you've ever wanted is on the other side of fear."

    I use it to help me remember to be brave as I write and to let my characters show that level of vulnerability as well. While it doesn't work all the time, it helps.

    And thank you for the reminder on ALL the ways you can incorporate emotion. I tend to go back to the same 2 or 3 ways. I can't wait to add some more of these to my word count today.

    I brought cheese grits and biscuits to share. Thanks again, Janet.

    Happy writing everyone, :)

    Jeanine

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    1. Jeanine, thanks for sharing that terrific quote. Fear is often the block to writing emotionally strong stories.

      Another block for me starting out was telling the emotion instead of showing it.

      Thanks for the cheese grits and biscuits. The southern gals are lining up.

      Janet

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    2. Jeanine, what a beautiful quote. Thanks for sharing!

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  10. Good morning, Janet, and thank you for the keeper post on writing for emotional impact. Most readers read fiction primarily to FEEL what the characters are feeling, to see the world through their eyes, and if you can deliver on that you've won the hearts of your readers! Make them laugh, cry, smile, remember.

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    1. Good morning, Glynna. You've said why emotion is important so beautifully! Thank you!

      Janet

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    2. Glynna, you are exactly right!! I've said that a million times, make me feel and I'm a fan for life :-)

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  11. Janet, I love your blog posts! They're always filled with insightful information that I need to use in my stories. Thank you for working so hard on this and digging so deeply into emotion! I love your writing. Your stories are always filled with emotion and transport me back in time. :)

    It's almost Turkey Time! Hugs to all!

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    1. Debby, thank you for your sweet words! You've got a gift for writing suspense. You make readers care about your characters, then make them worry.

      I love Thanksgiving. I love the traditional food and that the day is laid back, well, at least once the cooking and clean up are done.

      Hugs, Janet

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  12. Testing testing...my long comment isn't showing up.

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    1. Well, I guess that means it's long lost. I'll go type it again!

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    2. I'm sorry, Missy. :-( I hate when that happens.

      Janet

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  13. Janet, I loved this post! And I really enjoyed the examples you shared from the books I've loved so much. I felt the emotion instantly in those passages. You're SO good at that!!

    I had to smile at how writing can be so therapeutic. :) Issues that I'm dealing with (or things God is dealing with in me!) often turn up in my stories. I'll find myself sitting at the keyboard crying like you did.

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    1. Missy, weeping at the keyboard is always a good sign that we're getting emotion on the page. Afterwards I always feel drained.

      Usually I'm not much of a crier. I tend to tear up but hold in the weeping. I know if I make myself cry, I'm golden. :-)

      Thanks for your sweet words about my books. As my cp, you've been part of getting that emotion on the page.

      Janet

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    2. I don't often cry either, but when a book makes me shed real tears, I know that it's good! Pack it full of punch...lol!

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    3. Trixi, a good cry isn't a bad thing. :-)

      Janet

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  14. Janet you post inspired me! I like emotion that comes out in conversation. I'm not actually brave but here's my line about too much of a good thing. Smothering.

    “When I actually found a purpose it was leading men, protecting the innocent, and planning flawless missions. It’s who I am. How can I do anything else?”

    “Yes, Jason, but do you have to unload all that on Rylie in one truckload? Six tons of the richest topsoil poured over one rosebush will kill it.”

    I love your inspiration.

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    1. Barbara, thanks for sharing. Dialogue is a powerful place to get emotion on the page. I love the imagery you used to show the hero's smothering. Excellent!

      Janet

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  15. I SOOOOO have a problem writing emotion.

    "Gnaw Bone Christian Church cast a morning shadow, the steeple’s silhouette pointing right at Nate like the finger of God." I love this.

    I'll have to come back later and see if I can post an emotional sentence. I have grandkids running amuck right now...       

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    1. Connie, thanks! It's fun to give life to inanimate things.

      I'm picturing your active grandkids and loving it! I miss the little ones.

      Janet

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  16. Another excellent post, Janet! Emotion is crucial for creating that connection between the reader and our characters.

    Your tip about using one character to describe another is one I used recently in a new story I've been working on. The hero sees something in the heroine that hints not only at her current state of mind but also at what she might have been through in the past.

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    1. Hi Myra. I think it's far easier to describe the emotion that one character sees in another's facial expressions, actions and dialogue, than it is to show the emotion a character is experiencing in her or his own head. Hope that makes sense. It's tricky to say, even for a writer. :-)

      Janet

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  17. Would that every emotional scene came as suddenly and easily as this one did (and would the rest of the story would too):

    "Jesus fought for you. Strived for you. He DIED for you. Not just for other sinners. Everything he did, he did it for YOU.”
    He released her and she stumbled back, shaking.
    “Now don’t you DARE tell me you’re not worth fighting for.”

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    1. Rachael, your excerpt gave me chills! Thank you for sharing. The emotion is strong in his dialogue and in her reactions. Excellent!

      Wishing you the best with this story.

      Janet

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    2. Wow!! What a powerful picture in the pages of a book...Rachael, would you share which one this is from? I think I'd like to read it :-)

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  18. Thank you Janet for your wonderful post. I have printed it out for further study.

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  19. Janet, I think this is one of the biggest challenges for me as a writer. One thing I am learning is that my characters will only go as deep (emotionally) as I'm willing to go. This has been something God has been working out in me.

    I love all your suggestions. I'm going to printing and holding onto this post!

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    1. Jeanne, I think we all struggle with wanting to hold back emotionally. Not all emotion is painful, of course. I love writing humorous scenes. But when the emotion hit's home, it's hard to write. In a sense we're actors, using what we've experienced to wow our audience. Being onstage is scary.

      Janet

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  20. Janet, thank you for the post! I am a reader...I'd like to share this one: "To love or have loved, that is enough. Ask nothing further. There is no other pearl to be found in the dark folds of life." —Victor Hugo, Les Misérables
    Very vivid and emotional to me :)

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    1. Natalya, Hugo's imagery of love as a pearl in the dark folds of life is beautiful and carries a enormous emotional wallop. Thank you for sharing!

      Janet

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  21. Hi Janet:

    You do emotions so well in your writing. You've really broken it down here into its many constitute parts. This makes the process of writing emotions more understandable. Indeed, I can think of many good emotional examples in each of your books.

    Moreover, what I think you do especially well is in the creation of highly charged emotional situations. If the situation you put your characters into is in itself emotionally electrifying, then you are half way home before you've written the first word.

    In your "The Substitute Bride" you start with the injustice of a forced marriage on the heroine who is escaping with few resources into an unexpected mail order bride situation. This is a classic (d.i.d.) Damsel in Distress which has universal appeal.

    Injustice always works to stimulate emotions in readers but when you make the unjust situation also funny because the cause of that injustice will soon be humbled in turn…well…then you have now produced emotions on steroids!

    That's just what you did in "Courting the Doctor's Daughter" when the heroine calls out the hero as a charlatan quack selling worthless 'snake oil' from the wagon he came into town with. Actually his 'tonic' is real medicine and he is a modern medical school trained doctor coming to town to assist her father in his medical practice.

    After the heroine dressed him down as a fake in front of the town they soon meet again.


    "Well, well." Luke Jacobs gave her a lazy simile. "We meet again."

    Mary's hands curled into fists. "Yes, Mr. Jacobs, we do."

    "Will you tell me where I can find the livery?"

    The cocky grin he wore infuriated her. And he knew it.
    "Have you a remedy for horses? Or looking for some manure to add to your spiel?" That ought to wipe the smirk off his insufferable face.

    He chuckled. "I need to bed down my horse. You wouldn't want an innocent animal at risk."

    "True, but I wouldn't mind putting a guilty beast at peril." She eyed him, making no secret which beast she meant.


    Instead of leaving, he took a step closer. "I can see my presence in this town unhinges you. I assure you, I'm quite harmless."

    Mary pulled her five-foot-two frame erect. "Nothing unhinges me, Mr. Jacobs. Net even the prospect of a charlatan in town."



    While this is a big injustice to the hero, the situation is also funny because the more insulting she becomes, the deeper the hole she is digging in which she will soon have to humble herself out of when she learns who he really is!

    This is really a brilliant situation which combines injustice with comeuppance and which in turn splinters into a full spectrum of emotions: outrage, annoyance, arrogance, indignation, insult, anger, chagrin, and the beat goes on! How do you miss with an opening situation like this?

    In scientific discovery it is said that asking the right questions is 80% of making the right discoveries. I think this is also true for writing. Start with the most creatively pregnant initial states and you're 80% on the way to being emotionally successful.

    I'd say you are the right person to write about creating emotions in fiction and that a part II to this post would be welcomed.

    Vince

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    1. Vince, when I read your insightful comments to my craft posts, I often wish we could've co-authored them. You're exactly right, highly charged situations are perfect for writing emotion as they carry huge stakes that put the characters in conflict and get the readers involved.

      The Substitute Bride was fun to write because poor Elizabeth was a fish out of water. Not one bit the farm wife and mother that Ted desperately needed and thought he was getting. Her mishaps were humorous but the story carried strong conflict. The wounds of her past made her close her heart. Ted has to be the most patient hero I've ever written. :-)

      I love openings where the hero and heroine get off on the wrong foot. In Courting the Doctor's Daughter, Mary had valid reasons for mistrusting peddler Luke, but it was great fun to take them toe to toe and then to have her eat crow. Thank you for sharing the excerpt. There's conflict in this scene but also sexual tension, which is obvious when they part. The yin-yang of the story.

      Janet

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  22. Janet, you are SO wise! (Not to mention sweet and pretty too!) Seriously, your posts are always filled with wisdom, and this one today is one I sure needed. Writing emotion in my stories tends to come easier at some times than other times. If I'm not totally focused at the time, it's hard. But when I can completely block out everything else and "be" that character, it's so much easier (for me, at least!).
    Thank you so much for sharing this today, and I hope you and your family will have a wonderful, blessed Thanksgiving. :)
    Hugs, Patti Jo

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    1. Patti Jo, you're great at encouraging others, especially me! Thank you! Being the character is the secret! And you already know that.

      Hope you and your family have a wonderful Thanksgiving! We're blessed.

      Hugs, Janet

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  23. Hi Janet, when I write romantic suspense I struggle with enough emotion. This is definitely a keeper post. Thanks!

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    1. Jackie, the suspense should help with the emotion. At least fear!

      Janet

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  24. Ms. Janet, this is FANTASTIC information. I've been asking what's wrong with the story I'm working on. EMOTION. Got it! I chickened out on sending my sentences though ;)

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    1. Sharee, Emotion is tough for everyone. Well, maybe it's just me and you, but I doubt it.

      Don't be afraid to share in Seekerville! We get how hard it is to write emotional stories.

      Janet

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  25. Great article, Janet! Going to have to re read it when I don't have a headache. But I took in enough to know that I want to read it again.

    Happy Thanksgiving and God's blessings to you and all of Seekerville!

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    1. Phyllis, I'm sorry about your headache! Is it weather related?

      Happy Thanksgiving to you and yours!

      Janet

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  26. Great post, Janet. I know this is what I need to work on in my book as I go back and revise it. Here is a scene I will share. Not sure if it's quite what you're looking for, but here goes. In the story, Courtney is a young woman who has been estranged from her father for years. She has been caring for her grandmother, but now she has been reunited with her father after her grandmother dies in a tornado. Courtney has decided she could move away and live with her father. This scene begins where he tells her it wouldn't work.

    Now the tears flowed freely as Courtney could no longer hold them back. “Didn’t it even occur to you I might want to go with you?”
    Ted shook his head. “Courtney, I wasn’t expecting this. Your life has been here all these years. You only have a few more semesters to go before you graduate. You need to stay here and finish your degree. Then you can decide if you want to do something different.”
    “But we’ve just gotten back to each other again,” Courtney said in clipped tones. “Do you really want to throw that all away now?”
    “Of course not,” Ted replied. “But it won’t be like it was before. You can visit me—maybe even for an extended vacation. I will come visit you when I can, too.”
    Courtney looked at Ted through watery eyes. “So you won’t even try to think of a solution to make this work?”
    Ted spoke softly. “No, Courtney, there isn’t a realistic solution to this. You need to stay here in Nebraska, finish your degree, and get back to being a young woman with a future ahead of her. You have missed out on so much taking care of your grandmother.”
    “What I need is the one thing I’ve never had.” Courtney slammed back from the table. “That’s a father. So I guess I still don’t have one. Thanks a lot.”
    Courtney raced from the room and upstairs to her own room, stifling the sobs until she was safely behind the door. She threw herself on the bed, crying until the pillow was soaked. When repeated knocks sounded on the door, Courtney ignored them.

    Please enter me in the drawing for the Amazon card. I've already read "A Daddy for Christmas" so no need to put me in the drawing for that. Someone else can enjoy it. It is a good story.

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    1. Sandy, thanks for sharing your excerpt. I love the conflict in the dialogue between father and daughter. I'm not sure whose side I'm on. I can see her father's point about the importance of finishing school, but I also understand her desire for a full-time father after years of being estranged. I love this: “What I need is the one thing I’ve never had.” Courtney slammed back from the table. “That’s a father. So I guess I still don’t have one. Thanks a lot.” That's strong emotion!

      I'm glad you enjoyed "A Daddy for Christmas."

      Janet

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    2. Thank you for your comments, Janet. I'm glad you liked the scene. I definitely will be looking for ways to put in more emotion.

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    3. Sandy, hope it goes well! Writing isn't for sissies. :-)

      Janet

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  27. I am a big Irene Hannon fan (like Trixi). In Rainbow’s End, Irene said God’s ways aren’t our ways. His plans surpass all our understanding. Seeking a logical explanation for what happens…doesn’t make sense to even try. There is no logical, human answer. (brought tears to my eyes)
    This was not in a book, but last week Missy T. said this, and it touched me: God knows what we can handle, and of course enables us for that.

    I loved your post, Janet. Thanks for it and for your giveaway of your book and gift card!
    Happy Thanksgiving!

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    1. Jackie, it's fun to see another Irene Hannon fan! She's right, isn't she? God's ways aren't our ways.

      Missy's spot on, too. God enables us and I'm grateful!

      Happy Thanksgiving!
      Janet

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  28. Great tips Janet and just what I needed as my cp said my wip heroine lacked emotion. yikes. Thanks for the list and helpful tips.

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    1. Hi Sandra. I think we get so close to the story that we miss what fresh eyes see. You'll get there! You always do.

      Janet

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  29. Wow, this is such a great post, Janet. I've been working on rewrites today, and this is just what I needed. Thank you so much for the tips, advice and examples! And Happy Thanksgiving!

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    1. Hi Laura, have fun with those revisions and a blessed Thanksgiving!

      Janet

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  30. Janet this is a gem! Thank you so much for these much needed tips. I am going to pin this one! You rock!

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    1. Kelly, thanks for your enthusiasm! You rock! :-)

      Janet

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  31. Thanks for these tips! I suffer often with description of emotion. Either it is completely internal or there are only outward signs. I am trying to find the middle ground.

    I'd put down a sentence as an example but it's late and I have some edits that I need to add so... now that I have made my excuses I shall flee.

    Please enter my name in the drawing.

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    1. Nicki, sometimes it works best for me if I combine the action or reactions with a sentence or two of internal.

      Excerpt or not, you're in the drawing.

      Janet

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  32. Thanks for a great post, Janet! This is going to be one of those that I have to go back and read several times to make sure I don't miss any of the goodness!

    You're absolutely right, we have to open ourselves up and lay it all out on the page to be truly effective. And I've found that sometimes God uses what I'm writing to heal previously untouched wounds for me. Nothing is wasted!

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    1. Amanda, you make a terrific point. Our writing can heal us and even heal and help readers. Stories are not just to entertain, though that's always good.

      Janet

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  33. As a reader I do want to feel the story as I read it.

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    1. Mary, thanks for underscoring the importance of emotional stories for readers.

      Janet

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  34. I so needed this in-depth post on emotion. Thank you, Janet!!

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  35. JANET!!! I'm late, I'm late, for a very important date because this blog is SOOOOOO wonderfully meaty and thorough on how to put emotion into our writing!!

    Now, as a weepy CDQ, I don't generally have problems injecting emotion into my books (smile), but there are times when I hit the wall and need to reassess HOW to tap into those emotions I need, and this post is an absolute KEEPER for that, my friend!

    Mondays are generally brain-dead for me since we are so busy on weekends with company and commitments, so a lot of times, it's not till Tuesday that I finally tune in once again, so again, I apologize that yesterday was one of thos tardy Mondays! :|

    Hugs,
    Julie

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    1. Julie, writing emotion is one of your strengths. If only you could loan out some of that CDQ to me! :-)

      Janet

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  36. Janet, count me in with Julie...yesterday got away from me and I can't get it back!

    This post and your examples was a wake-up call for me. I never knew there were so many ways to use emotion in my writing. I'm printing this one out and putting it to good use.

    Wishing you and yours a Blessed Thanksgiving!

    Blessings,
    Marcia

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    1. Marcia, I hope the tips help.

      We have a lot to be thankful for. Have a special Thanksgiving!

      Janet

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  37. I can't think of one off the top of my head but some have left me laughing or crying. Happy Thanksgiving. Kim

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    1. Hi Kim,

      Titles are tricky to remember, but when I find an author who does that for me, I'm looking for their next book.

      Janet

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  38. Love this post! The emotion in a book is what makes me feel connected to the character and creates a more memorable and touching reading experience.

    Happy Thanksgiving!

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    1. Heidi, memorable and touching are a writer's goal for her stories!

      Hope you had a great Thanksgiving.

      Janet

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  39. Thanks for your great post. Once again I am reminded why God made me a reader and not a writer!
    Blessings to all.
    Connie

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    1. Connie, thanks for your sweet words to all writers everywhere! Bless you!

      Janet

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