Print This Article Post Comment Add To Favorites Email to Friends Ezine Ready

Imagine This, Part 2

By: Jade Lee Home | Writing-and-Speaking


Imagery and Characterization, can the two ever meet outside of an English class?

Seething volcano or skittish bird, what image best fits your characters and why would anyone care? Last time I talked about giving a unified imagery set to your main characters. I outlined how choosing basic element properties to your characters creates adds texture and EASE to a character arc. We went with the basic earth, air, wind, and fire possibilities. But let's say you want to go one step further. How would that work and why?

Make your imagery more specific. First off, add metal to your list of elements. Then while you're at it, maybe add all the elements of the periodic table. What if your hero is a tinman in search of a heart? Give him metallic colors to wear and surround himself in. Make him bendable, but when he adjusts to the heroine it gives him a sharp edge to his words and actions.

Now start picking out words to use for your hero. Match it with all five senses, but make sure to pick words that reflect both the good and the bad. You want to be able to indicate your character's changes from a problem through growth into happiness (and love). Confused? Try these examples. For sightmetallic and reflective. When people look at him they see themselves reflected back, not the man himself. When you describe him and his environment surround him in chrome and give him a tin car toy collection. Let the heroine see him as childlike but cold. Then as he grows around her, you can add color to his clothing and surroundings.

Soundtinny, brittle. You don't have to make his voice sound tinny or thin. That's not hero-like! But he can speak with a brittle edge or it can grate like metal on metal. He can hit something that clinks. When he's depressed he can have a hollow echo to his tone, but as he warms to the heroine, his voice gets depth and color. Eventuallyat the endsomeone hears his heartbeat. Even the music he listens to changes from Metallica to countryor maybe that's too much of a stretch.

Touchsharp but malleable. Initially his touches are cold and angry words hit like shards. But as he changes, his rough edges smooth. His face is not chiseled but pressed or shaped. Then when he smiles he shows a kind of light (heroine's reflected light). She warms him (because metal doesn't carry his own warmth), but he protects her and brings out her child-like qualities (because he's a tin toy).

Now you add taste and scent. Truthfully, with a tin toy image, I stick with cold feel, metallic taste, and sterile scent. None of that is erotic or hero-like. So if you mention these things, keep them at the beginning of the book, letting the negative words drop away as he changes for the better. He is, after all, gaining a heart and growing into a real boy. But remember, he can be a geologist or a metal worker. He can work in a sterile room or be comfortable in clinical settings.

So now you get the idea, but don't just stop there. Make your images very specific. My hero in Tempted Tigress is a Chinese ink and brush set. He's a scholar and when he feels drained, I say that his words were like ink mixed too thin. His body is thin and pointed, and during the love scene, his touch paints words on her.

My heroine in Cornered Tigress is a cat. Every time she enters a room, she experiences it first through taste and scent. When she's afraid she tends to go into tiny enclosed spaces. You can use anything that sparks your imagination, so...go wild!



Article Source: http://www.eArticlesOnline.com

About the Author:
Jade Lee's Tigress series romance novels delve into the hidden sensuality of the Dragon/Tigress religious sect in pre-revolutionary China. Read more about the Tao of Sex at http://www.jadeleeauthor.com

Tags: , , , ,

Please Rate this Article

 

Not yet Rated

Click the XML Icon Above to Receive Writing-and-Speaking Articles Via RSS!

Recent Related Articles From Writing-and-Speaking

  • Making My Own Metal Detector!
    By: Darry J.Oswald | Jun 7th 2006
    Mention the words metal detector and you'll get completely different reactions from different people. For instance, some people think of combing a beach in search of coins or buried treasure. Other people think of airport security, or the handheld scanners at a concert or sporting event.

    A basic metal detecto ...
    Read

  • Who's In Charge Of Your Day - You Or Your To-do List?
    By: Deborah Dubree | Aug 17th 2006
    I'll never get all of this done! I don't even know where to start!" Have you ever uttered these words? Do you feel like you've lost control of your day, your desk and even your mind? Read

  • Perimenopause And Phantom Periods
    By: Susan Megge | Jan 12th 2007
    If you've experienced symptoms exactly like those that may occur when you're expecting your period, but no period is present or ever arrives, it's most likely that you're having a phantom" period.

    Phantom periods are described as a period minus the menses. In other words, you may feel irritable, bloated, fat ...
    Read

  • Flower Preservation
    By: Bobbie McKee.. | Aug 1st 2007
    Admit it or not but, receiving a well-arranged bouquet or even those that have been freshly- picked from the garden by your special someone, will always be significant. It will unmistakably brighten up your facade as you gaze at one of Mother Nature's beautiful offspring. You cannot put into words that you feel like you are ... Read

  • How To Find Reliable Organic Herb Suppliers
    By: John Wishley | Aug 7th 2007
    Herbs have been essential in cooking for centuries because of their flavor, scent and healing qualities. Simple food can be turned into a gourmet meal by adding little bit of herbs. Medicinal herbs have been used for healing a number of ailments and proved to be very effective. Herbs are often added to candles, soaps, used ... Read

  • Five Reasons Why You Must Give Eurotalk A Chance

    Learning a foreign language is easy for young children, yet as they gradually get older, the ability to quickly and easily pick up phrases, words, and the feel for the language diminishes. As adults, the ease with which a foreign language can be learned is reduced even further, and thus many classes teaching new languages a ... Read

  • Door Knobs Welcome Beauty To Your Home

    You touch them every day, and turn them in your hand. They can be smooth metal, cold stone or hard plastic. They are door knobs and they can be the sexiest thing in your house.

    It is time to take notice of these inconspicuous pieces of hardware and make them stand out as the baubles of beauty that they are. T ...
    Read

  • Guide To Preserving Flowers
    By: Bobbie McKee.. | Feb 26th 2008
    Admit it or not but, receiving a well-arranged bouquet or even those that have been freshly- picked from the garden by your special someone, will always be significant. It will unmistakably brighten up your facade as you gaze at one of Mother Nature's beautiful offspring. You cannot put into words that you feel like you are ... Read

  • Door Knobs - Welcome Beauty To Your Home
    By: mohsin | Sep 11th 2009
    You touch them every day, and turn them in your hand. They can be smooth metal, cold stone or hard plastic. They are doorknobs and they can be the sexiest thing in your house. It is time to take notice of these inconspicuous pieces of hardware and make them stand out as the baubles of beauty that they are. Read

  • Double Your Income With The Three Leveles Of Achievement
    By: Raymond Aaron | Oct 1st 2009
    I'd like to reveal the three-tiered goal-setting system I use with my mentoring students. The key to reaching any goal you set for yourself is to first write that goal down. The effects can be more dramatic than you might think. In fact, you can double your income in record time with this method.

    Here are ...
    Read


Copyright © 2005-2011 eArticlesOnline, LLC - All Rights Reserved
Terms of Service | Privacy Policy