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Techniques
Gawking
Characters
Tip Sheet
by Jessica Murphy
A
"gawking character" is a narrator who
tells the reader what happens in
a scene instead of letting the reader
experience the action directly.
This is called narrator intrusion, and it
robs the reader of the full
experience, thus distancing him from the
story. A gawking character
looks like this:
Gawking:
"Adam
saw the orange glow and the rolling black
smoke in the sky from
where he stood on the corner of the block.
As he jogged down the
sidewalk toward it, he felt a cool breeze
and smelled burning wood. He
ducked under the branch of a tree and saw
the burning house. From where
he stood, he felt the intense heat and
heard the flames roar and pop.
Adam stepped forward toward the open front
door but felt the searing
heat from the sidewalk drive him back."
The bold words show you
where the narrator steps between the
reader and the action and tells
the reader what happens. This detracts
from the reader’s experience. A
scene must allow the reader to experience
the action directly in order
to grab him. Would you prefer to watch a
friend eat a hot fudge sundae
and tell you how sweet it tastes, or would
you want to eat it yourself?
Here is the same sentence
without the gawking character:
Direct:
"Adam
glanced up from the corner of Kingwood and
Beechurst. The starlit
sky glowed orange, and thick smoke rolled
across it. He spun on one
heel, crunching grit on the sidewalk
beneath his shoes, and ran down
the street. The cool autumn breeze carried
sparks and the smell of
burning wood past him. As he brushed the
branches of a tree out of his
face, the burning house appeared.
A rushing roar
filled Adam’s ears, and a
wave of heat lifted the hairs on his tan
arms. Shading his blue eyes
with his hand, he squinted against the
blinding light. Flames engulfed
every inch of the house and licked at
the cloudless sky. They popped
and crackled from inside the house, the
sounds echoing down the empty
street. Adam rushed toward the front
porch, but the heat seared his
face."
This time, the narrator
does not water down the scene. We see no
"Adam felt," "Adam saw," "Adam
heard." Instead, the reader is the one
standing on the sidewalk, seeing
the flames, feeling their heat, hearing
their roar. This direct
experience captivates readers and keeps them
interested.
Nonphysical
Gawking
A gawking character can
also filter internal experiences, such as
thoughts or emotions. Again,
if the scene is being told from the
viewpoint character's perspective,
we can assume that any thoughts belong to
that character (unless he or
she can read others' thoughts or sense
emotions).
Gawking:
"Blood soaked
through the fabric, and Preston realized he
had plunged the blade into
Jack’s side."
Since this scene is told
from Preston’s point of view, he can be the
only one who realizes
something. We don’t need to state the
obvious.
Direct:
"A
red stain spread
across Jack's gut, matting the shirt to his
skin. The silver blade
glinted from where Preston had plunged it in
Jack’s side."
The same holds true for
emotions:
Gawking:
"I felt worried,
but a breeze made me feel a little better."
This is told in first
person point of view, so the narrator must
be the one who felt worried.
After all, he cannot feel another
character’s emotions. So, stating
what the narrator felt is redundant.
Direct:
"My stomach
churned, but the crisp air cooled my
feverish skin and the nausea
settled for the moment."
If you take out the
gawking character, your readers can
experience every scene directly.
Any less cheats them out of the story and,
in the end, loses them.
Use
our
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Services, and
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For
additional
tips, worksheets, and discussions, order your
own copy of the
Inspiration for Writers Tips and
Techniques Workbook.
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