Kill Adjectives and Adverbs - Descriptive Writing Tips

How to Draw the Reader Into Your Story and Make Them Care

In elementary school, the teacher taught students to utilize adjectives and adverbs generously in their writing. If you look at the average grade school student's story, you will find something a lot like this:

The thin, blonde woman talked loudly and angrily with the tall, nice man.

This sentence is correct grammatically, but it reads more like a diagram, and less like a piece of descriptive writing.
 

Unfortunately, older writers often fall into the same trap. And now, there is no elementary school teacher to give you a gold star. Publishable fiction writing must draw the reader into the story, not describe what is taking place. It is not an action sequence in a movie, it is an experience.

Take, for example, the following three paragraphs.

Sample One: The Elementary School Story

Greg, a brown-haired and brown-eyed man, about five foot eight and chubby, walked slowly down the street. He was coming to pick up Pam, his blonde-haired, buxom girlfriend who was sitting calmly on the cement steps in front of her red brick home.

Sample Two: Just the Facts

Greg walked down the street. He was coming to pick up his girlfriend, Pam, who was sitting on her front steps.

Sample Three: Good Descriptive Writing

Greg strolled down the street, the wind ruffling his shaggy brown hair. A smile lifted his cheeks when he spotted Pam waiting for him on her front steps. She flicked her long blonde hair over her shoulder and Greg sucked in his gut as he walked, once more amazed that such a beautiful woman wanted to be with him.

Sample One utilizes adjectives and adverbs to describe the scene. You learn that Greg has brown hair, brown eyes, is chubby, etc. Some may consider that this is painting a clear picture for the reader. In truth, it is providing too many unimportant details. Does it matter to the story that Greg has brown hair and brown eyes?

Sample Two states what is happening, but that is it. It does nothing to engage the reader, give any incite into the characters, or create any interest in knowing what might happen next. It's boring.

Related information
  • Publishable fiction writing must draw the reader into the story, not describe what is taking place.
  • Don't tell the reader any unimportant details.
  • Delve into the emotions behind an action, not just the action itself.
 
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She walked alone. The cold wind breathed fiercly against her face. Darkness shaddowed her. Roaring waves crashing beside her. The sand swallowing her toes as she walked towards it. The light shimmering above the rocks, flashing amongst the dancing stars, beconed her forward. She pulled her coat tighter, blocking the forcing wind from hitting her fragile body. How long has she been walking? The constant march towards the distant beaming light. Rain. The sky was shedding its heavy tears, which crashed onto her, drowning her. The roars grew louder, louder. Will the rain ever stop? Let me know what you think..

Posted on 03/24/2009 at 12:03:08 PM

Thankyou, this has really helped me. I am currently working on descriptive texts in school, i should write my descriptive story on here and see what you guys think i should do to improve. Would appreciate the help greatly. Brilliant help by the way, thankyou (:

Posted on 03/24/2009 at 11:03:51 AM

hey thanx that really helped me!

Posted on 11/12/2008 at 5:11:59 PM

Great point! Great piece!

Posted on 03/26/2008 at 2:03:55 PM

Spot-on! Congrats on being featured!

Posted on 03/26/2008 at 12:03:22 PM

Thanks! I've been working on this.

Posted on 03/26/2008 at 10:03:01 AM

this is excellent!

Posted on 11/17/2007 at 3:11:00 AM

WOW THAT WAS SOOO GOOD.

Posted on 11/02/2007 at 6:11:00 PM

good point. You might want to correct your use of incite to read insight tho

Posted on 10/04/2007 at 4:10:00 PM

Good hints

Posted on 09/27/2007 at 10:09:00 AM

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