“Show, don’t tell” is one of the most common pieces of advice given about writing, but should you follow this advice? In fact, sometimes you should tell (and not show). Here are some reasons why
First, let’s look at what the phrase means. ‘Show, don’t tell’ is often said to remind writers how much more powerful it is to put the reader in the thick of events rather than merely explain what is happening. Here’s an example:
- It was cold out. This is telling. The reader gets the information needed but it isn’t particularly evocative.
- The moonlight gleamed on the icy streets and the wind cut through Charlotte’s coat, numbing her hands. This is showing. Details that show the reader how cold it is rather than merely stating the fact non-descriptively.
Another reason why writing instructors are so enamoured of this advice is that beginning writers often have a habit of skipping over significant and climactic story points by quickly summarising what happened rather than putting the reader in the thick of things. “Show, don’t tell” helps to remind these writers that they need to make those moments visceral for the reader by showing them rather than simply telling the reader that they happened.
Despite the importance of showing the reader scenes which convey facts about characters and their environs, there are also times where the writer should sidestep the advice and tell. Showing instead of telling can have some disadvantages:
It can slow down the narrative
If you’ve ever talked to a boring conversationalist, you’ll also appreciate why ‘show, don’t tell’ can be good writing advice. A dull conversationalist often gives the minimum information required, without enlivening it with details. If you ask someone unskilled at conversing if they enjoyed a particular talk, they might simply say yes. If you ask a more engaging conversationalist, they will probably describe what they liked about the talk and why they found it engaging.
However, you can start to understand how ‘show, don’t tell’ can be misplaced advice if you think about another type of dull conversationalist — the person who always has to go on and on and on when they tell a story rather than getting quickly to the point. Sometimses this can be interesting, but other times, you simply need to find out what happens without all the padding along the way.
The above can happen in fiction, too. If you need to get the protagonist from home to the office in the morning, the reader does not need all the details of how the character woke, what they ate and what their morning commute was like unless it is integral to the story. Most of the time, it’s sufficient to simply write something like ‘Barbara woke up early and was in the office before eight.’
Having been told ‘show, don’t tell’ too many times can bog down writers who need to become more efficient at conveying key backstory. For example, not every piece of information about a character’s past needs to come to her in a flashback. Too much showing and your back story could distract from the main story.
‘Show, don’t tell’ doesn’t necessarily ensure good writing
Another potential pitfall of ‘show, don’t tell’ is that showing and not telling is not always a sure path to good writing. In fact, the writing created by showing can be just as clichéd as the writing produced by telling. For example, rather than say that a character is worried, you might say the character is wringing her hands. Yet think about it: How often in real life have you ever seen someone wring their hands? Raising an eyebrow to indicate surprise caustically is another example of a clichéd gesture — not that many people can raise one eyebrow anyway. If someone’s heart hammers or stomach clenches because they are afraid, this is something the reader has read many times before. This is not an inherently better way of conveying fear.
On the other hand, telling can be very good writing sometimes. Saying showing is better than telling suggests that the narrative voice should be invisible in a novel, but this is not always the case. Sometimes, a novel may have a very distinctive narrative voice. Here are three examples:
- George was a fearful person who avoided public speaking, spiders, heights, flying, swimming, dark alleys, roller coasters, driving too fast, unfamiliar environments, large dogs, small dogs, lap dogs and ducks.
- George had known fear his entire life. Fear walked with him, dined with him and slept with him — fear of flying and falling, fear of speaking and not speaking, fear of connecting and of being forgotten, fear of the dark and fear of the light.
- I never knew anybody as scared of the world as George was. He was a coward right down to his bones, and everybody in town knew it about him.
In the first example, an arch, humorous effect is achieved through the repetitive sentence structure and the increasingly absurd list of objects of potential fear, while the second uses repetition to a more sober effect. Either of these narrative voices might be omniscient or third person limited. In the third example, the first-person narrative voice informs us of George’s fear. Consider that all of these are more effective and evocative in different ways than generic descriptions that “show” us that George is fearful instead of telling us.
Insisting on showing rather than telling at all times also ignored many of the major strengths of writing:
It’s too cinematic
Movies are for showing things to the audience. That’s their strength. In a pinch, they might resort to voice-over narration, but generally, we don’t get inside a character’s head, and we learn information through exposition and through watching the story unfold. Visual storytelling is one of film’s strengths, and it has access to a number of tools that fiction does not.
Now, imagine if movies suddenly decided that they needed to be more like fiction. They started going into the heads of various characters and telling us what they were thinking and relying on language to describe events that happened rather than showing us those events. We’d wonder what had happen to the visuals we expect. Even audiences who aren’t into special effects don’t attend a movie expecting to sit through the equivalent of an audio book.
In the same way, when we insist on showing all of the time and never telling, we are denying one of fiction’s essential powers, and that is the power of telling. The novel can enter characters’ heads and tell us what they are thinking and tell us why they are the way they are. Fiction can transcribe characters’ thoughts, and this is a powerful tool.
It may be that the adage to show instead of telling rose from a rejection of the 19th century novel convention. This was perhaps the heyday of the novel form, but many conventions of the time have not survived into the 21st century. Novelists such as Charles Dickens and Anthony Trollope did not hesitate to tell their readers things. Often, the omniscient narrator of these novels would address the reader directly. The tone was often that of the narrator as another character who was relating the story to the reader.
The omniscient narrator is less popular than it once was, and a contemporary novel is more likely to use first person or third person limited. However, as demonstrated above, even these voices can make effective use of telling. Rejecting telling as a fiction technique essentially rejects an important aspect of storytelling.
Sometimes, the reader just needs help
Attempting to adhere to ‘show, don’t tell’ can leave a writer feeling as though they are playing a game of charades. How many clues are necessary to make a character’s tone of voice, intentions or emotions clear enough to the reader? Furthermore, a writer who relies too much on showing and not telling can run the risk of making private associations that pass readers by. Sometimes a simple declarative sentence is what the reader needs to get the point and move on.
However, doing so often involves breaking two other commonly heard writing rules. Writers are urged to avoid overuse of adjectives and adverbs as well forms of “be.” However, take a look at the sentences below that do quickly convey needed information and break all of these rules, and keep in mind that every sentence in a novel does not have to dazzle:
- Sarah looked sad. ‘I thought she would be there,’ she said dejectedly.
- Martin was exhausted.
- She could tell he was angry again. ‘I found my clothes sitting in the washing machine again,’ he said
In the first example, you could say that Sarah’s lip trembled or her eyes filled with tears, but how is that less of a cliché? In the second sentence, in some cases, you might want to be evocative in your description of Martin’s exhaustion, but you might just need to get this detail out of the way and move on. In the third example, the implication is that the speaker says seemingly innocuous things that someone who doesn’t know him as well as the point-of-view character might not see as angry. In this case, it is simply more efficient to tell the reader the viewpoint character’s impression.
‘Show, don’t tell’ is a common piece of writing advice, but it has its limitations. Telling can be an advantage in fiction as it can keep up the pace and allows for stylistic flourishes in narration. It also lets the writer play to fiction’s unique strengths over other narrative forms. Finally, it acknowledges that the reader does need to be given direct information sometimes.
I hope this helped! If you have any questions, feel free to ask at my Ask Box
Tag: non sherlock
Professor Stephen Hawking poses with Benedict Cumberbatch and Eddie Redmayne on the set of the movies Hawking (2004) and The Theory Of Everything (2014)
Underlined PSA
Figment, the recently closed writing website, has just launched (after a long delay) their long-awaited successor to figment known as Underlined, where users can post their work and receive feedback, supposedly.
DO NOT USE UNDERLINED. DO NOT POST YOUR WORK ON UNDERLINED.
Underlined’s terms and conditions contains a clause stating that the rights to all your work that you post on their website belongs to them!!!!
Underlined belongs to Penguin Random House. This is an extremely dirty trick for them to play on writers, especially young writers and children, who come to the internet to get feedback and will lose the rights to their work. Please boost!!!
For my writing friends looking for an online writing community, DO NOT USE Underlined.
I went to confirm @greater-than-the-sword‘s post, because seriously publishers are still pulling this garbage? And yes, they are. If you want to check out the full terms and conditions, have at it. They are full of writers’ nightmares, a few of which I’ll highlight under the cut.
Be aware guys
Spreading necessary word.
british people: fouking right innit
me sobbing: what are you saying i’m so scared
Tmi Tuesday
1. Last kiss 2. Last phone call 3. Last text message 4. Last song you listened to 5. Last time you cried HAVE YOU EVER: 6. Dated someone twice 7. Been cheated on 8. Self harmed 9. Lost someone special 10. Been depressed 11. Been drunk and threw up THIS YEAR HAVE YOU: 12. had sex 13. How many people have you had sex with this year? 15. Made a new friend 17. Laughed until you cried 18. Met someone who changed you 19. Found out who your true friends were 20. Found out someone was talking about you 26. What did you do for your last Birthday 27. What time did you wake up today 29. Name something you CANNOT wait for 30. Last time you saw your all of your siblings at the same time 31. What is one thing you wish you could change about your life 32. What are you listening to right now 33. When is the last time you had sex? 34. Who’s getting on your nerves right now 35. Most visited webpage 36. Favorite colour 37. Nicknames 38. Relationship Status 39. Zodiac sign 40. Male or female 41. Primary school 42. Secondary School 43. High school/college 44. Eye color 46. Height 47. Do you have a crush on someone 48. What do you like about yourself 49. Piercings 50. Tattoos 51. Righty or lefty FIRSTS: 53. First piercing 54. First best friend 55. First hookup 56. First Bestfriend RIGHT NOW: 59. Eating 60. Drinking 61. I’m about to 62. Listening to 63. Waiting for YOUR FUTURE: 64. Want kids? 65. Get married? 66. Career WHICH IS BETTER: 67. Lips or eyes 68. Hugs or kisses 69. Shorter or taller 70. Older or Younger 71. Romantic or spontaneous 72. Nice stomach or nice arms 73. Sensitive or loud 74. Hook-up or relationship HAVE YOU EVER: 76. Kissed a stranger 77. Drank hard liquor 78. Lost glasses/contacts 79. Had sex 80. Broken someone’s heart 82. Been arrested 83. Turned someone down 84. Cried when someone died 85. Fallen for a friend DO YOU BELIEVE IN: 86. Yourself 87. Miracles 88. Love at first sight 89. Heaven 90. Santa Clause 91. Kiss on the first date 92. Angels 93. How would you label yourself? 94. Someone You Pray Everyday For 95. Did you sing today 96. Who From All Your Ex’s have You Cared The Most About 97. If you could go back in time, how far would you go? 98. Out Of Everything In The World What Do You Wish For 99. Are you afraid of falling in love? 100. Do you like the way you look? 101. Make your own question
a blog: *follows me*
me, an aged monarch lounging on my fur-strewn throne, gesturing for my servant to bring me my monacle: Bring them here! Bring them here, I say. Let me look at them.
guards: *drag the unwitting blog before me*
me, peering intently at the new blog and poking them with my scepter: Is this a real person? Hmm? What have you to say for yourself? What are your fandoms? Your interests? Speak up, these old ears aren’t what they used to be.
guards, tentatively: they do seem to be a real person, sire. We found them in possession of several memes and a fandom rant.
me, subsiding back into my sumptuous furs and waving them away: most extraordinary. It has been an age since there was a real person, but just as well, the dungeons have been overflowing with those tacky pornbots. This newcomer may remain in my domain. Make them welcome. And fetch me a quill! I feel a ficlet coming on…
this is the funniest thing i have ever read
This is my level of dramatic

We have 60 legislative days to pressure Congress to act.

PSA: My dash was getting spammed with posts from people I don’t even follow. Seems mobile has yet another “feature” that literally nobody asked for. You can turn it off in Dashboard Preferences.
Yet another thing to turn off
URG it happens every time I’m not on Tumblr every 3-4 hours and I have about 20 posts from random people but related sorta to the last things I liked/reblogged.








