![]() ![]() ![]() Later on, we get even more description of the night, and the description reveals the dark thoughts of the narrator while also making the, somehow, beautiful. Days before, at the motel, I had asked myself, What color is the desert at night? A stupid question, yet somehow I felt it held the key to my future, or perhaps not so much my future as my capacity for suffering. Night was beginning to approach from the east. On the horizon I could see the highway disappearing into the hills. And you'll notice there's a little bit of telling in this, but it works because there's so much showing as well: This is probably my favorite part of the story. My first thought was: They're policemen, here to arrest me. When we came out of the classroom, the director was waiting with two guys who turned out to be civil servants employed by the state of Durango. This works so well because instead of using the word paranoid, he shows the author doing paranoid things. And since I was up I would check all the locks. Then I went back to bed and closed my eyes, but having drunk so much water I soon had to get up again to urinate. Before going to bed, I would make sure the door and the windows of my room were securely and tightly shut…. Here's an example of how Bolaño brilliantly shows the author's paranoia: ![]() However, he never explicitly says, “I was so paranoid.” Instead, he builds the mood through action. Throughout the story, Balaño's narrator reveals how paranoid he is. “Show, don't tell” action that reveals the mood. I knew that I wouldn't stick to running a writing workshop in some godforsaken town in northern Mexico. I knew that under no circumstances would I settle down in Gómez Palacio. Instead of writing specifically about feelings, write about why your characters are doing the things they're doing. Orscon Scott Card says one of the best ways to characterize is by talking about motivation. Here are three ways Bolaño builds up a single mood without telling: 1. The twenty-three year old narrator feels he has already washed up and has exiled himself to a sparse town in the deserts of northern Mexico. The mood of “Gómez Palacio” is failure and the other emotions that come with it, like self-pity, paranoia, and depression. I've been studying Roberto Bolaño's short story “ Gómez Palacio” from the New Yorker, and it's a clinic on how to show emotion and mood without telling.Įdgar Allen Poe said this about how to write a short story, “A short story must have a single mood and every sentence must build towards it.” James? How to “Show, Don't Tell” with Emotion It's the magic of reading: that an author can arrange a series of letters in a certain order and that these letters can affect our emotions.Īs a writer, how do you develop mood in a short story or in the chapter of your novel without telling? Is it possible to build up emotional language while following the advice “Show, Don't Tell”? In other words, can you make your readers feel something without writing like Stephenie Meyer or E.L. ![]()
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