What is JacketFlap

  • JacketFlap connects you to the work of more than 200,000 authors, illustrators, publishers and other creators of books for Children and Young Adults. The site is updated daily with information about every book, author, illustrator, and publisher in the children's / young adult book industry. Members include published authors and illustrators, librarians, agents, editors, publicists, booksellers, publishers and fans.
    Join now (it's free).

Sort Blog Posts

Sort Posts by:

  • in
    from   

Suggest a Blog

Enter a Blog's Feed URL below and click Submit:

Most Commented Posts

In the past 7 days

Recent Posts

(from all 1518 Blogs)

Recent Comments

JacketFlap Sponsors

Spread the word about books.
Put this Widget on your blog!
  • Powered by JacketFlap.com

Are you a book Publisher?
Learn about Widgets now!

Advertise on JacketFlap

MyJacketFlap Blogs

  • Login or Register for free to create your own customized page of blog posts from your favorite blogs. You can also add blogs by clicking the "Add to MyJacketFlap" links next to the blog name in each post.

Blog Posts by Date

Click days in this calendar to see posts by day or month
new posts in all blogs
Viewing: Blog Posts from All 1518 Blogs, dated 6/2012 [Help]
Results 1 - 25 of 5,324
1. KBR Unpublished Picture Book Award



Don't forget...
Submissions for the Kids Book Review Unpublished Picture Book Award close Monday 16 July! Have you got your entry in yet?



The winner will receive $300, a manuscript appraisal and the chance to have their work viewed by Sue Whiting, Publishing Manager at Walker Books! 


Two runners-up will win $100 each, and a short manuscript appraisal. We also reserve the right to nominate highly commended authors (no prize).
Manuscript submissions are for picture books of 500 words or less, no illustrations required.




For submissions details and to get your entry in, head to http://www.kids-bookreview.com/2012/04/kbrs-unpublished-manuscript-award-2012.html


Submissions must be sent by email by Monday 16 July 2012 at 11.59pm
0 Comments on KBR Unpublished Picture Book Award as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment
2. hands studies


two studies of my own left hand drawn in grahite but used in two different ways..

hands studies by dibujandoarte

hands studies by dibujandoarte

0 Comments on hands studies as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment
3. Ripley Patton Speaks Of Unicorns



First cab off the rank for our series of guest posts by contributors to the Light Touch Paper Stand Back anthology is Ripley Patton, who has written for Andromeda Spaceways Inflight Magazine, so was well known to Simon Petrie and Edwina Harvey when they were inviting submissions. Here’s what the editors of LTP have to say about her story:
Simon:
Ripley’s ‘Mary Had A Unicorn’ takes the concept of horn-headed horsies in what was, for me at least, a completely unexpected and rewarding direction. Mary is the warts-and-all teenager in a warts-and-all family, and Patience the unicorn is Mary’s shiny white bete noire. Ripley (who calls this kind of thing ‘mythpunk’) pulls off a rounded, moving story that manages to make unicorns cool.
Edwina:
 I loved the sarky know-it-all teenage girl Ripley has painted so well in this piece, and how she discovers she *doesn’t* know everything after all.  I think Ripley does “Rights of Passage” stories very well.
Because of her New Zealand connections,  I chose to read from Ripley’s story at the launch at UnCONventional, the NZ Natcon.  I started at the beginning of the story and stopped at a cliff-hanger about one and a half pages later. I have to admit there was something satisfying in hearing groans from the audience who wanted to hear more. They were clearly hooked by Ripley’s wonderful tale!     
And here’s Ripley:
Mary Had a Unicorn Excerpt:  
The last thing on earth Mary Maloney wanted was a unicorn. She wasn't an addict, no matter what they said at the clinic. Sure, she used sometimes just for fun, or when she was down. But who didn't? It wasn't any different than the booze her dad tanked. Or the pot he smoked. But you didn't see anyone assigning him a freakin' genetically enginee

0 Comments on Ripley Patton Speaks Of Unicorns as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment
4. Giveaway for 4th of July Blog Hop



Book Giveaway



Something Old is book one of the Plain City Bridesmaids



or you can opt to receive Something Blue which releases August 1.

To enter, just leave your email addy as a comment.



If you're a registered reader on my blog, you only need comment.



Contest ends July 7, 2012.





Thanks for stopping in. Good luck.



Hop to the next giveaway using links in my right sidebar







Add a Comment
5. 7-Imp’s 7 Kicks #286: FeaturingUp-and-Coming Illustrator, Moira Swiatkowski


Separated
(Click to enlarge)

Given that here in Nashville we just beat our own record high temps—we got up to 110 degrees on Friday—I’m liking this opening image from Moira Swiatkowski. That girl is in a coat and scarf, by God! If only …

(Moira actually tells me that Me and My Gang can come hang out with her in Cape Cod to cool off. A swim and some ice cream up there. I wish.)

If Moira’s name is familiar to my dear Sunday kickers, it’s because she is one. She’s been “kicking” here on Sundays for a while now. Naturally, I ended up at her site—as I’m sure many of you have at some point—and decided I’d see if she’d like to come share some of her artwork. Lucky for us, she agreed.

I’m going to turn it right over to Moira, who’s going to introduce herself, and I thank her for visiting today … (more…)

23 Comments on 7-Imp’s 7 Kicks #286: FeaturingUp-and-Coming Illustrator, Moira Swiatkowski, last added: 7/2/2012
Display Comments Add a Comment
6. HOT LATEST UPDATED VIDEOS AND SEXY ACTRESES PHOTOS

VERY VERY VERY HOT HOT HOT ONLY HOT
[link]

HOT HOT LIP KISS
[link]
SUPER HOT PHOTOS
[link]
YOUTH HOT PHOTOS

Add a Comment
7. The Hindu Literary Prize

       They're inviting submissions for the third annual The Hindu Literary Prize; see the pdf for the eligibility requirements; it appears you have until 15 August to submit.
       The Hindu Literary Prize "recognises and encourages Indian writing in English" and so, as I've mentioned previously, disappointingly: "Works in Indian languages and translations are not eligible" .....
       Okay, there are reasons to stick to one language -- and they seemed to be aware of the issue after last year's prize: see my mention, and recall these words:

The Selection Committee would also like to request The Hindu to have, from next year onwards at least, separate awards of equal value for fiction written in English and that translated from the languages of India so that both receive equal attention
       So I look forward to the announcement very soon of that separate award of equal value. Because they didn't forget or anything, did they ?
       Did they ?

Add a Comment
8. Writing at a rate of 35 words a day ?

       China Daily note that Wang Wen-hsing [王文興] is giving a Literary lecture -- in which he's going to discuss his unusual approach to writing:

He locks himself in his house, reading and thinking, for 22 hours in a day and then uses two hours polishing the 35 words to perfection, he says.
       Yes:
While some writers work out a thousand words in a day, Wang insists on writing only 35 every day. He spent 25 years writing his famous book, The Man Against the Sea.
       (The Man Against the Sea has been translated into English -- and is under review at the complete review -- as Backed Against the Sea.)

Add a Comment
9. Prize winners under review

       I've added a new index, of prize-winning fiction under review at the complete review, for a few of the major international and national literary prizes.

Add a Comment
10. Popular in ... India

       Sure, the complete review has a decent amount of Indian literature under review -- but in June five of the six most popular reviews were Indian novels.
       Yes, the site gets a lot of traffic from the sub-continent, but still ..... Read the rest of this post

Add a Comment
11.

I want one! How amazing is Takanori Aiba? For nearly a decade since the late 1970s artist Takanori Aiba worked as a maze illustrator for Japanese fashion magazine POPYE. The following decade he worked as an architect and finally in 2003 decided to merge the two crafts—the design of physical space and the drawing of labyrinths—into these incredibly detailed tiny worlds. Using craft paper, plastic, plaster, acrylic resin, paint and other materials Aiba constructs sprawling miniature communities that wrap around bonsai trees, lighthouses, and amongst the cliffs of nearly vertical islands. Bio from (Colossal)


0 Comments on as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment
12. Industry News

Tara Lazar’s LITTLE RED GLIDING HOOD, with an icy twist on the familiar fairy tale, where Little Red is desperately searching for a partner in the upcoming doubles skating competition was sold to Heidi Kilgras at Random House Children’s, by Ammi-Joan Paquette at Erin Murphy Literary Agency (World).  Congratulation’s Tara!

At Ten Speed Press, Lisa Westmoreland has been promoted to senior editor.

Running Press:  Kristen Wiewora was promoted to senior editor, Cindy de la Hoz was promoted to editor, along with Jordana Tusman.

Running Press Children’s Lisa Cheng now reports directly to publisher Chris Navratil, while Marlo Scrimizzi reports to Cheng.

At S&S Children’s, Jacqui Hudson has been named ebook developer and specialist for the Free Press, Aladdin, Simon Spotlight, Paula Wiseman, McElderry, Little Simon, and Atheneum imprints, moving over from the desktop publishing department. In addition, Ciara Gay has joined the Simon Spotlight/Little Simon design team as Junior Designer. she was most recently an intern at Random House/Schwartz & Wade.

Talk tomorrow,

Kathy


Filed under: children writing, Editor & Agent Info, News, Publishing Industry Tagged: Ammi-Joan Pacquette, Erin Murphy, Random House, Running Press, Simon & Schuster, Tara Lazar, Ten Speed Press 5 Comments on Industry News, last added: 7/2/2012
Display Comments Add a Comment
13. The Last Warner Woman

Kei Miller.  The Last Warner Woman.  Minneapolis: Coffee House Press, 2012.          272 pages. Note:  Contains some swearing and a few explicit moments of sex. Having followed the Insatiable Booksluts reviews, I’d been wanting to read more independent press literature, so I browsed throughtheir publisher links.  On the Coffee House Press site, I found [...]

0 Comments on The Last Warner Woman as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment
14. Taking Some Time Off

Summer means a slower pace. Summer means longer days to spend with family and friends. Summer means more extra time to fall into a good book and write about the world around us.… Read More

Add a Comment
15. Book Review: Dust Girl by Sarah Zettel

Book: Dust Girl
Author: Sarah Zettel
Published: June 26, 2012
Source: Review copy from publisher, via NetGalley

It's not easy being half-black and half-white, or living in a dying little Kansas town during the Dust Bowl, or watching your mother's ludicrous faith that your father will return, when you've never seen him in all your thirteen years. But somehow Callie's doing all of that. And life isn't about to get any easier, because she's just discovered that her father was not only a black man, but a fairy as well, prince of the Midnight People. And as the princess and last heir to the throne, she's the top of everyone's list . . . and not in a good way.

But Callie's got weapons she never dreamed of, and if she masters them fast, she may just make it out alive. Callie's got to find her mother, she's got to find her father. But before all of that, she's got to find herself.

I've been hearing good things about this book. The premise intrigued me. A story set in Depression era America, woven together with Americanized fairy lore? Possible mashup heaven. Then I read it and oh yeah, definite mashup heaven. From the moment Callie realizes that the strange new guests at her mama's hotel are really giant locusts in disguise to the moment that the long black train pulls up on a Kansas City sidewalk, this was a wild and wonderful ride.

But what really knocks this book out of the park for me is the way that history and fairy lore weave together. For every wish granted, for every mythical monster that strolls on the stage, there's something equally strange but true to anchor it. Callie's first attempt at magic calls forth a huge dust storm. They get caught in the middle of a rabbit drive, trying to escape from a murderous zombie. The climax of the novel is set during a dance marathon, (with the band led by none other than Count Basie). The effect is that for everything that human beings have dreamed up, human reality has produced something stranger.

Wild and weird, rich and textured, this is a freaking amazing book. And I want more.

Music, particularly the folk music of the Depression, plays an enormously important role in this novel. So here's a treat for you:

1 Comments on Book Review: Dust Girl by Sarah Zettel, last added: 7/1/2012
Display Comments Add a Comment
16. IF: Refresh

This week's Illustration Friday topic is "refresh".

Geezersaurus has a lemonade to stay refreshed on a hot summer day.

I created this as a greeting card for various occasions.

Speaking of hot summers, we've had temperature in the high 80's in Alaska (I'm practically melting away here). How hot - or cold - is it where you live?

0 Comments on IF: Refresh as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment
17. Librarians for Chris Colfer #ala12

I know there are many of us out there: librarians that “gleeked” out when Chris Colfer’s name was announced as one of the authors to present at the 2012 Annual ALA Conference in Anaheim.  I know because I was one of them.

Librarians love Chris Colfer.  Why you may ask?  Because he loves libraries and writes children’s books.  In fact, it had been a dream of his to write “The Land of Stories” since he was ten years old.  How sweet is that?  Let’s face it, celebrities have a lot of choices after they achieve stardom.  They can design their own clothing line.  Have a fragrance named after them.  Star in their own reality TV show.  I think it’s safe to say that most of them, especially at the tender age of 22, would not decide to contribute to the world of kid lit and pen a novel–let alone a trilogy.  Chris Colfer is not your average celebrity.

He was truly everything a librarian would want in a presenter–eloquent, witty, and inspirational.  We laughed when he read through emails he exchanged with his illustrator exposing Chris’ hysterically high attention to detail. “Can the word ‘of’ in ‘The Land of Stories’ be lowered 3 millimeters so that the title is more horizontal and less arced?” (He used a real ruler…)  There were cheers from the audience when Chris suggested that Ryan Murphy cast the McKinley High School librarian to look more like Megan Fox, rather than the stereotypical librarian that currently is on the show.  And I know many librarians sitting in the audience tweeted when he said, “I hate the word bullying.  Let’s just call it like it is.  Harassment.”  Props, Chris.  Mad props.

http://img2-2.timeinc.net/ew/i/2012/01/18/Land-of-Stories_510.jpgThose of us lucky enough to attend the program each got our own ARC of his first book, set to be released on July 17.  We also got to see projected on screen a hand-drawn picture of the map of The Land of Stories as imagined by ten-year-old Chris himself…complete with a sai sword spinning Rapunzel.  After his program, he offered the floor to questions from the audience.  When asked “Would you prefer to win a book award for your writing, or an Oscar, Tony, or Emmy for your acting?” Chris replied “I’m not greedy, I’ll take any award they decide to give me.”  Well, Chris, I’m sure there will be many more awards in your future.  You are a force to be reckoned with, and in this librarian’s humble opinion, one of the most talented celebrities in Hollywood today.

 

Written by Renee, a very gleeful librarian

0 Comments on Librarians for Chris Colfer #ala12 as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment
18. Movie: The Leaf Men

It appears William Joyce's The Leaf Men has experienced an interesting journey to the big screen including a title change. It now called Epic.

Lovely trailer!

0 Comments on Movie: The Leaf Men as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment
19. Plein-air painting in New York City

Plein-air painting on the sidewalks of midtown Manhattan is a baptism by fire. You're jostled by the crowds, hustled by street people, choked by diesel fumes, and deafened by sirens. Shadows from the high rises sweep rapidly across any scene you choose.


(Link to video) On Thursday, Jeanette and I joined our friend Garin Baker to paint New York City's landmark Grand Central Terminal. Garin's summer intern, Sean Oswald, visiting from Ohio, accompanied us on the expedition.



Here is my oil painting (left) next to Garin's on the right. This is the second painting that Garin completed within the four hours that we allowed ourselves. The video finishes with a sketch that I did of a passenger on the train. More on that tomorrow. 


Garin Baker Fine Art
Sean Oswald teacher interview

19 Comments on Plein-air painting in New York City, last added: 7/3/2012
Display Comments Add a Comment
20. Illustration Friday- Topic Refresh

When I think of refresh I think of cold lemonade and watermelon on a warm day. Although it is warm here it is nothing like what many others are coping with. I wish cooler refreshing times ahead for all of you.
This image is watercolor on board.

7 Comments on Illustration Friday- Topic Refresh, last added: 7/4/2012
Display Comments Add a Comment
21. Book Haul (4)

0 Comments on Book Haul (4) as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment
22. When ‘Show, Don’t Tell’ is Really Bad Advice

If you’re a writer, you’ve probably heard “Show, Don’t Tell’ a million times. It’s one of those maxims you can’t escape. But I’m going to stick my neck out and declare…

I think that advice has led to a lot of really terrible writing.

Before you come at me with your sharpest pitchfork, let me explain my madness. I do believe, in many ways, it is good and useful and wise to ‘show’ things. There is a time and place for the camera pan, the action shot, the external focus. But a novel is not a screenplay. A movie is a string of external cues–visuals and sound–that tells a story. The viewer relies on these cues to make sense of the plot and all its underpinnings–the internal, intangibles such as emotion and theme.

The novel is an entirely different medium. A novel conjures a singular experience, not just through external description (what a camera can capture), but also by internal perception (the heart and soul an ordinary telephoto zoom can’t record). In a novel, there’s a lens that trumps all.

The human lens.

The fictive stream of consciousness. The thingamathink that pulls us under the skin of a character. The internal processor that that recalls events and interprets every moment of action in the context of a character’s deepest hopes, dreams, memories and fears.

Yet...motivated by well-intentioned advice, so many writers neglect this lens and start out writing novels like screenplays. They try to live by ‘show’ alone–moving characters here and there on a stage, describing everything in objective, surface-level terms the way a wide-angle camera shot would. This cheats the reader and sentences them to a parade of colorless, cliched gestures and descriptions.

John’s eyes widened in anxiety. Mary’s heart hammered. Glen’s jaw clenched. Raul’s brow quirked. Anna’s lips curled in a smirk. Neville clenched his fists at his sides. Snakes slithered in Jonah’s stomach.

Ugh. These gestures and reactions are all generic. They illuminate nothing about character, personality, conflict or plot. As Francine Prose so aptly writes in Reading Like a Writer, “they are not descriptions of an individual’s very particular response to a particular event, but rather a shorthand for common psychic states.”

Meaningless shorthand. Yes. But darn it, they show and don’t tell. And that’s the rule, right?

WRONG. WRONG. WRONG.

I am nothing more than an puny, unpublished, unknown Writer/Librarian/Beatle-Maniac, but I will not recant. I will not! Because writing fiction is a form of storyTELLING. I agree with Joshua Henkin when he calls ‘Show, Don’t Tell’ the ‘great lie of writing workshops.‘ I say go ahead and slip under that murderer’s/ballerina’s/magician’s/vampire’s skin, tap into that stream of consciousness and TELL that story, infusing

7 Comments on When ‘Show, Don’t Tell’ is Really Bad Advice, last added: 7/1/2012
Display Comments Add a Comment
23. archiemcphee: While many of us tend to spend our lunch breaks...









archiemcphee:

While many of us tend to spend our lunch breaks chatting with friends and coworkers, messing about with our smartphones, or maybe even reading a book, artist and high school teacher Gregory Euclide uses his 25-minute lunch breaks to makes beautiful, short-lived paintings with Sumi ink on dry erase boards. It began as a form of stress relief as well as a personal challenge and demonstration for his students. The results are simply wonderful. We love it when people turn mundane situations into awesome artistic outlets. 

Visit Neatorama to read an interview with Gregory Euclide about his marvelous white board artwork.









0 Comments on archiemcphee: While many of us tend to spend our lunch breaks... as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment
24. When ‘Show, Don’t Tell’ is Really Bad Advice

If you’re a writer, you’ve probably heard “Show, Don’t Tell’ a million times. It’s one of those maxims you can’t escape. But I’m going to stick my neck out and declare…

I think that advice has led to a lot of really terrible writing.

Before you come at me with your sharpest pitchfork, let me explain my madness. I do believe, in many ways, it is good and useful and wise to ‘show’ things. There is a time and place for the camera pan, the action shot, the external focus. But a novel is not a screenplay. A movie is a string of external cues–visuals and sound–that tells a story. The viewer relies on these cues to make sense of the plot and all its underpinnings–the internal, intangibles such as emotion and theme.

The novel is an entirely different medium. A novel conjures a singular experience, not just through external description (what a camera can capture), but also by internal perception (the heart and soul an ordinary telephoto zoom can’t record). In a novel, there’s a lens that trumps all.

The human lens.

The fictive stream of consciousness. The thingamathink that pulls us under the skin of a character. The internal processor that that recalls events and interprets every moment of action in the context of a character’s deepest hopes, dreams, memories and fears.

Yet...motivated by well-intentioned advice, so many writers neglect this lens and start out writing novels like screenplays. They try to live by ‘show’ alone–moving characters here and there on a stage, describing everything in objective, surface-level terms the way a wide-angle camera shot would. This cheats the reader and sentences them to a parade of colorless, cliched gestures and descriptions.

John’s eyes widened in anxiety. Mary’s heart hammered. Glen’s jaw clenched. Raul’s brow quirked. Anna’s lips curled in a smirk. Neville clenched his fists at his sides. Snakes slithered in Jonah’s stomach.

Ugh. These gestures and reactions are all generic. They illuminate nothing about character, personality, conflict or plot. As Francine Prose so aptly writes in Reading Like a Writer, “they are not descriptions of an individual’s very particular response to a particular event, but rather a shorthand for common psychic states.”

Meaningless shorthand. Yes. But darn it, they show and don’t tell. And that’s the rule, right?

WRONG. WRONG. WRONG.

I am nothing more than an puny, unpublished, unknown Writer/Librarian/Beatle-Maniac, but I will not recant. I will not! Because writing fiction is a form of storyTELLING. I agree with Joshua Henkin when he calls ‘Show, Don’t Tell’ the ‘great lie of writing workshops.‘ I say go ahead and slip under that murderer’s/ballerina’s/magician’s/vampire’s skin, tap into that stream of consciousness and TELL that story, infusing every moment that matters with personality and voice.

And if you still aren’t ready to drop your pitchfork, please look at these ‘show vs. tell’ examples before you skewer me:

Showing only (Excerpt altered. All telling parts omitted/edited):

“We just stand there silently. The grimy little station comes into view. The platform’s thick with cameras.
Peeta extends his hand. I look at him. ‘One more time? For the audience?’ he says. I take his hand, holding on tightly.

Showing with Physical Gestures: (Excerpt altered. Telling parts omitted/edited and replaced with physical gestures/reaction):

My stomach twists into knots. We just stand there silently. The grimy little station comes into view. The platform’s thick with cameras. When Peeta extends his hand, my eyes widen. ‘One more time? For the audience?’ he says, his jaw relaxing. I take his hand, holding on tightly. A shiver of dread runs down my spine.”

Showing and Telling (Excerpt as published, unaltered):

I also want to tell him how much I already miss him. But that wouldn’t be fair on my part.

So we just stand there silently, watching our grimy little station rise up around us. Through the window, I can see the platform’s thick with cameras. Everyone will be watching our homecoming.

Out of the corner of my eye, I see Peeta extend his hand. I look at him, unsure. ‘One more time? For the audience?’ he says. His voice isn’t angry. It’s hollow, which is worse. Already the boy with the bread is slipping away from me. I take his hand, holding on tightly, preparing for cameras, and dreading the moment when I will finally have to let go.”

Suzanne Collins, THE HUNGER GAMES

I think writers need to so show and tell. Still disagree? Did I miss something? Have I forgotten an important point? I’ve braced for impact, so fire away!

0 Comments on When ‘Show, Don’t Tell’ is Really Bad Advice as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment
25. When ‘Show, Don’t Tell’ is Really Bad Advice

If you’re a writer, you’ve probably heard “Show, Don’t Tell’ a million times. It’s one of those maxims you can’t escape. But I’m going to stick my neck out and declare…

I think that advice has led to a lot of really terrible writing.

Before you come at me with your sharpest pitchfork, let me explain my madness. I do believe, in many ways, it is good and useful and wise to ‘show’ things. There is a time and place for the camera pan, the action shot, the external focus. But a novel is not a screenplay. A movie is a string of external cues–visuals and sound–that tells a story. The viewer relies on these cues to make sense of the plot and all its underpinnings–the internal, intangibles such as emotion and theme.

The novel is an entirely different medium. A novel conjures a singular experience, not just through external description (what a camera can capture), but also by internal perception (the heart and soul an ordinary telephoto zoom can’t record). In a novel, there’s a lens that trumps all.

The human lens.

The fictive stream of consciousness. The thingamathink that pulls us under the skin of a character. The internal processor that that recalls events and interprets every moment of action in the context of a character’s deepest hopes, dreams, memories and fears.

Yet...motivated by well-intentioned advice, so many writers neglect this lens and start out writing novels like screenplays. They try to live by ‘show’ alone–moving characters here and there on a stage, describing everything in objective, surface-level terms the way a wide-angle camera shot would. This cheats the reader and sentences them to a parade of colorless, cliched gestures and descriptions.

John’s eyes widened in anxiety. Mary’s heart hammered. Glen’s jaw clenched. Raul’s brow quirked. Anna’s lips curled in a smirk. Neville clenched his fists at his sides. Snakes slithered in Jonah’s stomach.

Ugh. These gestures and reactions are all generic. They illuminate nothing about character, personality, conflict or plot. As Francine Prose so aptly writes in Reading Like a Writer, “they are not descriptions of an individual’s very particular response to a particular event, but rather a shorthand for common psychic states.”

Meaningless shorthand. Yes. But darn it, they show and don’t tell. And that’s the rule, right?

WRONG. WRONG. WRONG.

I am nothing more than an puny, unpublished, unknown Writer/Librarian/Beatle-Maniac, but I will not recant. I will not! Because writing fiction is a form of storyTELLING. I agree with Joshua Henkin when he calls ‘Show, Don’t Tell’ the ‘great lie of writing workshops.‘ I say go ahead and slip under that murderer’s/ballerina’s/magician’s/vampire’s skin, tap into that stream of consciousness and TELL that story, infusing every moment that matters with personality and voice.

And if you still aren’t ready to drop your pitchfork, please look at these ‘show vs. tell’ examples before you skewer me:

Showing only (Excerpt altered. All telling parts omitted/edited):

“We just stand there silently. The grimy little station comes into view. The platform’s thick with cameras.
Peeta extends his hand. I look at him. ‘One more time? For the audience?’ he says. I take his hand, holding on tightly.

Showing with Physical Gestures: (Excerpt altered. Telling parts omitted/edited and replaced with physical gestures/reaction):

My stomach twists into knots. We just stand there silently. The grimy little station comes into view. The platform’s thick with cameras. When Peeta extends his hand, my eyes widen. ‘One more time? For the audience?’ he says, his jaw relaxing. I take his hand, holding on tightly. A shiver of dread runs down my spine.”

Showing and Telling (Excerpt as published, unaltered):

I also want to tell him how much I already miss him. But that wouldn’t be fair on my part.

So we just stand there silently, watching our grimy little station rise up around us. Through the window, I can see the platform’s thick with cameras. Everyone will be watching our homecoming.

Out of the corner of my eye, I see Peeta extend his hand. I look at him, unsure. ‘One more time? For the audience?’ he says. His voice isn’t angry. It’s hollow, which is worse. Already the boy with the bread is slipping away from me. I take his hand, holding on tightly, preparing for cameras, and dreading the moment when I will finally have to let go.”

Suzanne Collins, THE HUNGER GAMES

I think writers need to so show and tell. Still disagree? Did I miss something? Have I forgotten an important point? I’ve braced for impact, so fire away!

0 Comments on When ‘Show, Don’t Tell’ is Really Bad Advice as of 1/1/1900
Add a Comment

View Next 25 Posts