Saturday, April 23, 2016

The Writer’s Dilemma. How Much Physical Description is Enough?

by Warren Adler @WarrenAdler

One of the imponderables of the fiction writing trade is just how much physical description is enough in order to fully flesh out a character’s identity. In years past many novels contained illustrations that purported to show images of the characters as conceived by the author.

A prime example would be the work of Hablot Knight Brown “Phiz” who illustrated the works of Charles Dickens. Such illustrations were not mirror-image portrayals of Dickens’ characters but imaginary images conceived by the illustrator. Apparently Dickens, who approved the work of the artist, thought they were representative enough.


As technology expanded its reach into photography, film, television and now the world of digital media, adaptors of literary works chose either live actors or imagined cartoon characters to represent those characters created in the mind of the author. They made their choices based on their own imaginary representations choosing actors who they thought might best pass a loose test of authorial authenticity with a canny eye out for commercial appeal.

Most storytellers from time immemorial compose their material as a kind of roadmap conceived in their imagination to communicate their vision to the imagination of the reader. The author’s expectation is that exposition, dialogue, character interaction, emotional contact, descriptive details of the environment, authorial insights, and perhaps a sketchy outline of the characters’ physiognomy are all enough to create an image of a character’s appearance in the reader’s mind.

The reader would be well aware of the approximate age of the characters by their impulses and desires, especially in those stories that deal with the mysteries of physical love and motivational impulses like ambition, faith, rapaciousness, depression, yearning and other emotions. In terms of the actual physical description, the physiognomy was and is often left to the reader’s imagination.

For example, in the Bible we are well aware of the characters and their motivations, but do we know what they really look like from the text? When we first encounter David, we know he is a young shepherd physically adroit, obviously chosen because he is skilled master of the slingshot.

With little physical details in the text, Michelangelo has imagined David as a stunning image carved in marble, fourteen feet tall. He is portrayed by the great sculptor as the most beautiful male figure on the planet, every part of him molded to represent the physical pinnacle of the gender.

Examples of such transference are legion. It is also true of the iconic painted and sculpted visions of Jesus Christ as an imagined human being and his depiction on the cross. Such physicality is not described anywhere in the new Testament.

There are so many examples of “left out physiognomy” descriptions that I’ll have to cherry-pick from my recollections.

Charles Swann and his mad passion for the courtesan Odette in Proust’s magnificent Swann’s Way is another interesting instance where the prime example of her physiognomy is Swann’s memory of Botticelli’s rendering of Moses’ first wife Zipporah.

Thus the reader must accept Swann’s memory of the painting, via the representation conceived by Botticelli, who imagined her from a brief mention in the old testament. Is anything more needed from Proust to fix Odette’s physical presence in one’s mind? Perhaps not.

Emma Bovary is another good example. Flaubert conceives of Emma with rich details of her psychology, her actions, even her inner thoughts, but the actual physical description is somewhat sketchy: black hair, big eyes, a birdlike walk. We know, of course, that she is a romantic, sexually frustrated and extravagant and obviously sensual and attractive but there are few concrete details. 

In today’s pop culture, the authors who have their books adapted to film have little choice but to accept the film makers’ physical version of their conceived characters. In Hemingway’s novels, for example, Gary Cooper was chosen to represent both Frederic Henry in “A Farewell to Arms” and Robert Jordan in “For Whom the Bell Tolls.” People of my generation have it fixed in our minds that Gary Cooper is the physical image of Hemingway’s conception.

The list of these “transferences” go on and on. Vivien Leigh is Scarlet O’Hara. Clark Gable personifies Rhett Butler. Did Margaret Mitchell conceive them physically as such? Detectives, cowboys, political figures, gangsters, courtesans, fairy tale characters, heroes and heroines of every conceivable category conceived in the imagination of authors are physically portrayed by actors. Indeed, this is not confined to fiction. “Based on a true story” has become a kind of logo to signify what is recycled as “real events.”

The question for the author is: how far he or she should go to individualize his or her character’s physical description? What is absolutely necessary for the depiction? Think of the possibilities. The color of the eyes, so varied and rich with meaning. The hair color: its length and style. The voice: its pitch, depth and rhythm. The skin hue: so fraught with genetic clues. The configuration of lips in a smile or pout. Height, posture, carriage, girth, age, gait, disfigurement, handicap and a limitless number of specific physical identifiers.

Is it a conscious decision of the author to leave out the physical descriptions deliberately to allow the reader to imagine his own images? As an author of many works of fiction, some highly descriptive of the characters’ physiognomy and some merely sketchy or non existent, I must confess that I am still somewhat ambivalent about such a choice but I raise the issue largely to solicit opinion from my fellow scribblers.

Just how much physical description is enough? 


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13 comments:

  1. I feel descriptive details are better in the beginning as the readers forms a visual idea of the character. There is nothing more frustrating than to be half way through a book and read a descriptive detail of a character that is different from what you already had in mind.

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    1. Thank you for your insightful comment, Lill. Details help in strengthening that relationship and emotional investment between the reader and the character(s). Our imaginations do form our own interpretations and fill in the dots. WA

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  2. Warren thanks for your interesting post. I've often wondered about this subject. Some authors give great detail about a character's appearance and some very little or none. Then there's the issue of a cover image not matching the image the author gave in the book, which brings up another question about giving description.

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    1. I'm glad you found it interesting, Marilyn. Do you feel a certain lack when an author doesn't provide many details about a character's appearance? Book covers do set a certain tone, don't they? WA

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  3. I like to have a "picture" of the primary characters in my mind. Recently, I finished reading a book where a baby played a big part in the story yet never once was described. I kept wondering if he had big brown eyes or blue eyes, if he had hair or he was bald. The baby's actions alone were not enough to endear me to him. He remained a "mystery baby" floating on the page. Maybe not everyone would feel that way, but as a reader, I did.

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    1. Thank you for sharing, Linda. It's fascinating how some are bothered by a hazier portrait of a character while others are satisfied in filling in the blanks by themselves. How do you think your feelings toward the baby would have been affected in knowing the color of his eyes and other physical details? WA

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  4. Personally, I prefer authors who are scant about the appearance of their characters. It's not that in this way I can imagine them the way I prefer. I simply don't give a hoot about their appearance.

    However, I must also admit that reading Lill's comment made me remember an episode of when, as a child, I discovered halfway through a novel that the heroine was fair haired. Given that I had pictured her in my mind with shiny black hair, I decided to simply ignore the description of the author.

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    1. Thanks for sharing, Peter. Perhaps the authors of the novels you're reading are giving you such an abundance of other details that the character becomes well-formed in your mind because of them and the physicality of them shifts to the backburner. WA

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  5. Warren Adler's discussion of description is fascinating in its detail and motivational impulse that might be depicted via physical description. However, his reference to Michelangelo's David is unfortunate; it does not address the chief characteristic of David--his Jewishness.
    For reasons unknown, Michelangelo did not show David as circumcised. Genesis 17 is very clear on this requirement. Verse 14 states that Abraham's descendants who are not circumcised have broken God's covenant and shall be cut off. Circumcision thus became a most important sign of God's people.
    Michelangelo was not interested in scholarly study but was an avid student of the arts. Nevertheless it hard to fathom he wouldn't have known about the importance of that sign of the covenant.

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  6. As a reader, I like scant details so I can form my own image. However if a character is displayed on the cover, that does play into my thoughts.

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    1. Thanks for sharing, Jennifer. Book covers do set a certain tone or expectation for a story. We're all guilty of judging a book by its cover, but it's important to give it a second glance, right? WA

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  7. I am a novice writer. However, I've read numerous intrigue action novels. The ones I like don't bore me with descriptions or settings. Put me in Cairo and I get it, don't describe the sand or palms or pyramids. Hence, I'm not great at descriptions or settings. I'd rather my reader make up their own character with a bit of help from me to lead them toward my conception. So, I give ancestral lineage, perhaps height and a small description that would separate them from the other characters. Say, Israeli man who is bald, paunchy, and stooped. Or North African female who could pass for a fashion model.

    The thing that I wonder about is how many people, men in particular, don't read whole genres of books because of all the fluff. At my first sit down with my mentor she asked me, "When you read, do you skip to the white area?" In many instances I do, especially if the paragraphs are trying to tell me what Paris looks like. I may never get a book published by a house, but I'm betting there are others like me who would enjoy the same thing who don't read much at this point.

    Your article seems to support my view. How wrong am I?

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  8. Thanks for sharing, Warren (what do you know, a fellow Warren!). If you feel that it's slowing down the movement in your narrative, leave it out. Keep the relevant details. The most important thing is to keep readers asking themselves: what happens next? WA

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