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Stopping
Readers In Their Tracks
by Laura Backes
If you love
books, you can probably think of several occasions when
you've been stopped in your tracks by a unique turn of
phrase or a magical description. "How did the author
do that?" you wonder. "It's so simple, and yet
so profound."
Authors get involved in the big picture when creating a
book, and rightly so. We need to think about aspects of
character, plot, setting, conflict, development and
resolution. We must view the overall structure to ensure
that it's sound. But once that story's down on paper and
we know it's not going anywhere, we can start
concentrating on the words. The forest is planted; now
take a look at the trees.
Think again about those track-stopping experiences you've
had when reading. What else do you remember about the
book? If occasional groupings of words overshadowed the
story, then the author was struggling to sound writerly
at the expense of the plot. However, if individual words
and phrases melded seamlessly together to create a
satisfying experience from beginning to end, then the
words and the story had equal weight.
As a children's book writer, how do you entice readers
with your words, the essential building blocks of any
type of writing, without overshadowing the other elements
that make up your book? The answer: Keep it simple.
Skilled authors use everyday language in new, exciting
ways. One of my favorite picture book examples is from
Maurice Sendak's Where the Wild Things Are. Max is
sailing across the ocean to meet the wild things for the
first time. Instead of telling us the ocean is "very
big" or Max travels for "a long time,"
Sendak takes advantage of young children's budding
fascination with calendars:
"...and he sailed off through night and day
and in and out of weeks
and almost over a year
to where the wild things are."
It's a poetic description of time, and fits perfectly
with the poetic tone of the rest of the text. Memorable
description happens when the writer pairs disparate
images to create a new picture infused with emotion. The
feelings make the place seem familiar to the reader.
Here's the opening paragraph from Paul Fleischman's
middle grade novel The Borning Room: Four small walls,
sheathed with pine, painted white. A window. A door onto
the kitchen, for warmth. Two chairs. A bed, nearly
filling up the room, like a bird held in cupped hands.
Standing by the bed, squire beside his knight, a table
bearing a Bible and a lamp. I'm certain you've stood in
many such rooms. Even if the reader has never stood in
such a room, she can see it. The words Fleishman uses are
accessible to every reader, and invite her in. The text
is not complex--most second graders can read it
easily--yet it is rich and interesting. The unadorned
language reflects the straightforward nature of the
narrator.
The Prologue of Natalie Babbitt's novel Tuck Everlasting
begins with a metaphor that sets the stage for the tale
to follow. Babbitt likens the first week of August to the
seat at the top of a Ferris wheel: ...The weeks that come
before are only a climb from balmy spring, and those that
follow a drop to the chill of autumn, but the first week
of August is motionless, and hot. She goes on to describe
that time, her verbs building the tension: sunsets
"smeared with too much color"; lightning that
"quivers all alone." And then the kicker: These
are strange and breathless days, the dog days, when
people are led to do things they are sure to be sorry for
after.
Surprising the reader is good, and Babbitt jolts the
reader out of his dog-days reverie with that last
sentence. Joyful images of Ferris wheels and hot summer
days are abruptly replaced by the promise of a story
about bad decisions. This, then, is what you want your
reader to notice about your writing. Not the individual
words, not the fancy descriptions, but the overall
feeling of being taken for a ride through the story. Pay
attention to your words, but don't let them take control.
The only way to keep the words from overpowering the
story is to always keep it simple.
©
Copyright Laura Backes. All Rights Reserved.
Laura Backes
is the publisher of Children's Book Insider, the
Newsletter for Children's Writers. For more
information about writing children's books,
including free articles, market tips, insider
secrets and much more, visit Children's Book
Insider's home on the web at http://write4kids.com
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