Realtors
know that location is everything in buying or selling property. Try to
sell a house that's near a busy highway or high tension wires, and
you'll learn this. In story, location is also really important--I
wouldn't say it's everything to a story, but it's as vital as good
characters and strong plot.
Unfortunately,
it's the aspect of writing that many writers tack on or ignore
altogether.
This week's post looks at the larger aspects of
setting--beyond just the physical elements--something I like to call the container of your book.
It starts with a story about Margaret, one of my students.
Margaret was working on her memoir about growing up in post-World-War-II Mississippi. The storyboard
worked well: plot points were good and you could track the dilemma of
her story. So Margaret confidently took a few pages to her writing group
for review.
Feedback
was lukewarm. The pages lacked a sense of place, her fellow writers
told her. Margaret, confused, came to my class to learn about this
mysterious “sense of place.”
She
didn’t want to include moss-hung oaks and sweet tea in her story, she
said. The South was old news to her; she was writing her memoir to put
it behind her. Thoughts and reflections about what she’d learned since
she’d left the South were much more interesting.
When
I read Margaret’s “islands,” I saw how brief was her acknowledgement of
setting. She did note the ancient oak tree outside her family’s home,
the stuffed furniture in the parlor, the separate summer kitchen which
kept the main house cool in August. But overall, there was an imbalance
of sensory road signs. Indeed, Margaret’s story could’ve taken place as
easily in New York as Mississippi.
I
told her that while good characters initially engage us, and plot
twists provide momentum, it is setting that gives the emotional
grounding that keeps us involved.
“But
most of this story takes place inside my reaction to it,” she argued,
“in my thoughts and feelings, looking back from my life now.” All good,
but thoughts and feelings tell more than show. They are abstract. It’s
counter-intuitive, but reflective writing doesn’t communicate emotion to
a reader, only to the writer who has thought or felt it. I suggested
Margaret study the container of her story, the environment where it
happens, and distill just enough detail to provide the missing sense of
place.
Rick Bass, award-winning author of Winter
and other memoirs, described this sense of place as the small elements
that “lay claim to you, eventually, with a cumulative power.” Bass said
they can be as simple as “the direction of a breeze one day, a single
sentence that a friend might speak to you, a raven flying across the
meadow and circling back again.” A container comprises these small outer
details, but also the inner landscape of culture, politics, religion,
history-the atmosphere of the life in your book. Writing believable
container is much more than just adding one or two setting details.
It’s about creating a strong center that pulls a reader in and lets her
fully live in your pages.
Growing
up in such a senses-rich location, Margaret felt the South was
overblown and overstated. But it was the container that she could-and
eventually did-use to beckon the reader into her book. It was only by
showing the South in all its over-the-top glory that she was able to
reveal to her reader just how suffocating the South can be.
How Does Setting Deliver Emotion?
John
was a first-time novelist. As a professional nonfiction writer, he was
trying to learn how container functioned in fiction.
In
John’s nonfiction books, outer setting details were used effectively to
illustrate anecdotes. He was accustomed to crafting a minimal
environment in his small stories. But as a new novelist,
John was not having success with this plug-and-play approach. He felt
his descriptions of breezes, sunlight, and birds were stiff, besides
being injected into each scene willy-nilly.
So I asked him first to consider why he’d selected these details, why he’d placed them just there in his scenes.
John
sheepishly said he was just trying to check “setting” off his writerly
to-do list. There was also zero intent to use setting to enhance
emotion-which is its primary benefit.
Setting
must make sense with the emotional moment you’re writing about, I
explained. For example, if a character was struggling with a decision,
he might notice something in the setting that mirrored his uncertainty.
Not the clichéd dark and stormy night, but a small detail like a sweater
buttoned the wrong way on an old man he’s talking to. Or if it’s a
really big decision, a tree fallen across a road. A forgotten pan on the
hot stove. These details mirror the character’s unsettling confusion.
So
John began a list of the emotional moments in his book. He began
placing small setting details to echo each moment of his main
character’s emotion. The effect surprised him-there was so much more
payoff! We discussed how, if his character just thinks about his
decision, it stays in his gut and never reaches the reader’s.
The setting is a roadmap for the reader. It emphasizes what we’re supposed to be receiving from the scene.
Every
book takes place somewhere. Even the most abstract nonfiction book has
to have a setting. Writers can’t neglect this outer container, the
exterior setting, the physical location of their stories-and also how
the interior environment is reflected in those outer setting details.
John
learned that good placement of shown setting reveals emotion as subtly
as a butterfly landing on a late-summer dahlia-without any
interpreting by the writer.
A Basic Lesson: Creating Outer Container
Outer
container, what is traditionally called setting, is demonstrated via
outwardly perceived things: the weather, the time of day or night, where
a person is physically in a room or garden or other specific location,
how light slants against an object or a wall or someone’s arm, what
smells and sounds surround us. But how many writers omit these details,
thinking, like Margaret, that they’re boring or slow or unnecessary?
Outer setting details are the first conveyers of emotion to a reader. They set the stage.
Few
playwrights set their theater productions on a completely blank
stage-no backdrop, no furniture, no atmosphere. Much easier for the
audience to imagine themselves inside an 1850s farmhouse kitchen if
there is a rocker, an old wooden table, a woodstove, and windows with
eyelet curtains. So what outer details exist in your story right now?
What have you taken time to write in?
Start
by viewing what your narrator notices. Describe the seen setting first.
Time of day (light, dark), objects, furniture, nature.
Move
through each of the remaining five senses, asking yourself what might
be perceived. What smells are in this place? What sounds? Add in these
details without interpretation, without qualifiers, without telling the
reader what the details mean. Write, “The garden was pink and gold and
filled with summer light.” Don’t add, “It was beautiful to Marci.”
We already get that. No interpreting required.
Overly Familiar Settings
Annie,
a published mystery writer, was working on her latest story set in the
Florida Keys. “I’m trying to be more mindful of adding in atmosphere to
heighten the sense of being in Key West,” she told me. “But one of the
things that struck me when I visited the Keys was how familiar it
seemed, how much the Keys were like the Jersey Shore town I was born and
raised in. The marshy and swampy landscape, riddled with bays and
inlets in South Jersey, has long encouraged all sorts of the same
activities that take place in the Keys. Even the architecture is similar,” she added, “and the tourist trade and the activities are all alike.”
Annie
wanted to know how she could give her readers a sense of Key West while
showing that, for her character, this setting felt so familiar. I told
her that even if a character knows the story’s setting,
from growing up there or visiting, it’s important to realize that her
reader won’t. It’s still necessary to place the reader in space, time,
weather conditions, hot and sultry or cool and breezy. Setting places a
reader firmly in the time of day, the experience of light slanting
across the floor, or the way the tropical wind rattles the windows. In
Annie’s mystery, she could mention the familiarity of it to her character, but she still had to establish setting.
In
short, setting lets us get inside the character’s head, via what she
notices about where she is, how it impacts her, including what she tries
to ignore. You can’t skip this step of crafting believable outer container. Or else we won’t feel your story.
Your Weekly Writing Exercise
Choose
a section of your writing where you want the reader to really get a
punch of emotion. Answer three of the questions below. Select one or two
sentences that come from the answers and add them to your writing.
1. What does the narrator smell?
2. What does she sense on her skin (air temperature)?
3. What does she hear close to her? In the distance?
4. What three objects are nearby?
5. What time of day is it? How can she tell via the setting (without a clock)?
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