Nicole Bianchi

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The Lost Diamond (Short Story)

Published December 19, 2020 | Last Updated December 19, 2020 By Nicole Bianchi Leave a Comment

If you’re celebrating Christmas next week, I hope you have a lovely, joy-filled holiday. If you don’t celebrate or if this is a difficult time for you, I wish you peace and happiness this December.

And I have a little gift for you — I’ve just published this Christmas-themed short story:

The Lost Diamond (A Short Story)

“Laura did not notice the diamond was missing until the subway reached 42nd street. She had been playing with the engagement ring, twirling it back and forth around her finger, while she tried not to stare at the other passengers. When the subway stopped at the station platform, she jumped to her feet and bent down to collect her two shopping bags. It was then that she saw the ring’s empty prongs...”

I wrote this story several years ago so it depicts a New York City that will probably be a little different from 2020. I hope you enjoy the story! 🙂 Merry Christmas!

Filed Under: creativity, featured, fiction, inspiration, writing

How to Vividly Describe Emotions: 3 Powerful Strategies (Video)

Published December 10, 2020 | Last Updated July 9, 2021 By Nicole Bianchi Leave a Comment

I’m excited to share a new video with you today!

In this video, I’m sharing three powerful strategies that will help you vividly describe emotion in your writing so you can connect with your readers on a deeper level. We’ll look at these strategies in action in the books of famous writers including J. R. R. Tolkien and Virginia Woolf.

I hope you find the video helpful! I’d love to hear from you in the comments.

1. Describe the Scene to an Outside Observer

The first strategy is to describe what is happening in the scene you are writing. Think about your reader as a fly on the wall. What would they see as an outside observer?

This mimics real life where you wouldn’t have a narrator appear in front of you and say, “This person here is angry,” but you would have to come to that conclusion yourself by that person’s words or actions or the expression on that person’s face.

What does your character say out loud? How can you use that dialogue to convey the emotions they are experiencing? What does the character’s voice sound like? Does it quiver or become louder or softer? What does their face look like? Is their forehead furrowed? Or are their teeth clenched, their eyes flashing?

If a character says, “Don’t talk to me about this anymore,” and they storm out of a room, slamming the door behind them, we obviously can come to the conclusion that the character is angry. This is far more entertaining for your readers since it makes us feel like we are right there in the room with your characters.

Here’s an example of this strategy in The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald:

“Please don’t.” Her voice was cold, but the rancour was gone from it. She looked at Gatsby. “There, Jay,” she said — but her hand as she tried to light a cigarette was trembling. Suddenly she threw the cigarette and the burning match on the carpet.

In this quote, you can see that Fitzgerald doesn’t tell us that this character, Daisy, is upset or nervous or sad, but he is able to show us the emotions of the character through dialogue. Daisy is hardly able to speak. Then she tries to light a cigarette, but her hand is trembling so much that she just throws it away.

From these little actions and from the dialogue (Fitzgerald also describes the tone of Daisy’s voice), we are able to deduce the emotional state of this character.

2. Describe What the Character Physically Feels

The second strategy that you can use to powerfully convey emotions is to describe what your characters are physically feeling.

A quick note with this strategy: you can only use it for your point of view character unless you have an omniscient narrator who is able to know what multiple characters are feeling.

But, for example, if you’re writing a short story in the first person, you would only be able to describe what your main character is physically feeling, not the other characters in the story (unless your protagonist is a mind reader). Just like in real life, you don’t know if someone else has a headache unless they tell you.

Here’s how you can use this strategy for your point of view characters:

Think about the emotion the character is experiencing and how that affects their five senses: touch, taste, smell, sight, and hearing. If the character is nervous, you might write that the character’s mouth grows dry or maybe their palms are sweaty or their head is throbbing.

These details help your reader share the emotion of your character.

Here’s an example of this strategy in action in the Pulitzer prize-winning novel So Big by Edna Ferber:

But once in the vast bed she lay there utterly lost in the waves of terror and loneliness that envelop one at night in a strange house amongst strange people. She lay there, tensed and tight, her toes curled with nervousness, her spine hunched with it, her leg muscles taut.

Notice in this quote that Ferber does use the word “nervousness”. Words like this aren’t off-limits, but you want to make sure you take them to the next level and add more description behind them so we can truly experience what your character is feeling.

When I use this strategy, if I’m writing fiction, I like to think about whether I have ever been in a situation that was similar to my characters. How did I react in that situation? What did it feel like that? How did it affect me physically?

So put yourself in the head of your characters and consider how you can make your reader feel like they are the character, viscerally sharing his or her emotions.

3. Evoke Emotion with Similes and Metaphors

The third strategy is to use similes and metaphors to describe your characters’ emotions.

With a simile, you use the words “like or as” to compare two things to each other, and with a metaphor, you compare two things without those words.

Here is an example from J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Fellowship of the Ring:

“I am old, Gandalf. I don’t look it, but I am beginning to feel it in my heart of hearts. Well-preserved indeed!” he snorted. “Why, I feel all thin, sort of stretched, if you know what I mean: like butter that has been scraped over too much bread. That can’t be right. I need a change, or something.”

In this quote, Tolkien uses a simile (“like butter that has been scraped over too much bread”) to describe how Bilbo feels old and worn out. This technique adds another level of imagery to Tolkien’s writing and helps us to connect with Bilbo on a deeper level.

Even though there’s more going on in the story here (Bilbo is in possession of a magic ring), we can all identify with Bilbo and say, “I’ve felt like that too!” It also makes the writing memorable since this simile might get stuck in our heads, and the next time we’re feeling exhausted, we might quote this line from the book.

Here’s another example of this strategy, this time a metaphor, from Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse:

They came to her, naturally, since she was a woman, all day long with this and that; one wanting this, another that; the children were growing up; she often felt she was nothing but a sponge sopped full of human emotions.

When I read this metaphor for the first time (“she was nothing but a sponge”), I pictured somebody ringing out a sponge, the water soaking their hands. It brings another dimension to the description and helps readers empathize with the character. You’ve probably been in a similar situation where you too have felt overwhelmed, a sponge sopped full.

The Takeaway

When you’re able to powerfully convey emotions in your writing, your stories becomes more compelling. Readers better identify with the main characters and want to continue reading to discover what’s going to happen to them.

In the characters, readers see reflections of their own souls, their own deepest emotions that they did not realize anyone else shared.

Ann Lamott observes,

Writing and reading decrease our sense of isolation. They deepen and widen and expand our sense of life: they feed the soul. When writers make us shake our heads with the exactness of their prose and their truths, and even make us laugh about ourselves or life, our buoyancy is restored. We are given a shot at dancing with, or at least clapping along with, the absurdity of life, instead of being squashed by it over and over again. It’s like singing on a boat during a terrible storm at sea. You can’t stop the raging storm, but singing can change the hearts and spirits of the people who are together on that ship.

Filed Under: creativity, fiction, writing

How to Use NaNoWriMo to Reach Your Writing Goals

Published October 29, 2020 | Last Updated April 10, 2024 By Nicole Bianchi Leave a Comment

Photo by Nathan Ansell on Unsplash

November is only a few days away, and that means that National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo!) is nearly here.

If you’ve never heard of NaNoWriMo before, it’s a month-long event where writers challenge themselves to pen a 50,000-word novel (about the length of novels like The Great Gatsby or Fahrenheit 451).

The goal is to begin writing on the first of November and finish by midnight of November 30. You can plan and outline your story as much as you like beforehand, but the actual writing of the story can only be done during November.

Maybe you’re thinking, “Whoa, that sounds intimidating! Not for me.” Perhaps you don’t have any idea for a story, or you have an idea but not a plot, or maybe you’re not even interested in writing fiction.

Well, one of the cool things about NaNoWriMo is that you can adapt it to your own writing goals. Whether you want to start a daily writing routine or overcome writer’s block or begin working on a nonfiction project, NaNoWriMo can be the perfect way to motivate yourself to start writing.

In today’s post, I’m sharing three ways that I’ve used NaNoWriMo in the past to reach several different writing goals. 

[Read more…]

Filed Under: blogging, creativity, featured, fiction, inspiration, motivation, writing

3 Fantastic Writing Tips from Arthur Conan Doyle

Published October 16, 2020 | Last Updated April 10, 2024 By Nicole Bianchi 6 Comments


Photo of Arthur Conan Doyle, Public domain

This month I’ve been watching Granada’s “Sherlock Holmes” television series from the 1980s starring Jeremy Brett.

While I’ve enjoyed numerous different screen adaptations of Arthur Conan Doyle’s mystery stories (including Cumberbatch’s modern spin on the detective), I love how this series seems to bring the stories to life exactly as Doyle envisioned them, including his Victorian England. Jeremy Brett is absolutely fantastic as Holmes, portraying him to the letter.  

Here’s a clip from one of the episodes (you can find many of the episodes on YouTube).

I also love how this show makes me want to dive back into the Holmes books all over again (I read them long ago when I was a little kid). Stay tuned! I might be typing up a blog post soon filled with writing techniques gleaned from Doyle’s stories.

But, today, I have an interesting find to share with you. 

While reading about Doyle and the Holmes stories online, I stumbled across a short article by Doyle titled “How I Write My Books”. The article first appeared in The Strand Magazine in 1924. 

It’s always fascinating to get a peek at the writing process of a famous author. 

Here are my top three takeaways:

[Read more…]

Filed Under: creativity, editing, fiction, inspiration, motivation, productivity, writing

3 Tips From F. Scott Fitzgerald for Writing Masterful Dialogue

Published October 3, 2020 | Last Updated April 10, 2024 By Nicole Bianchi 1 Comment

Photo by Hannah Grace on Unsplash

September 22 marked the beginning of autumn, and it reminded me of this wonderful quote from The Great Gatsby,

Life starts all over again when it gets crisp in the fall.

As the quote repeated itself in my brain, I wondered what part of the book it came from. There are so many quotes like this one that people lift from books and share across Instagram and other social media sites, devoid of their original context.

So I went in search of the quote and found it on page 107 of my edition of The Great Gatsby. It’s a line of dialogue that the character Jordan says in reply to Gatsby’s love interest, Daisy:

‘What’ll we do with ourselves this afternoon,’ cried Daisy, ‘and the day after that, and the next thirty years?’

‘Don’t be morbid,’ Jordan said. ‘Life starts all over again when it gets crisp in the fall.’

The writer in me sprang to attention and said, “What masterfully written dialogue!”

Perhaps I could glean several tips from Fitzgerald that would help me to write masterful dialogue as well.

So I continued reading a little more of the scene and came away with these three takeaways.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: creativity, featured, fiction, inspiration, writing

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Hi, I’m Nicole! I help creatives, business owners, and writers take their writing and copywriting to the next level and grow their online audience. I’m also a published writer of essays and short stories. As a Christian, I seek to follow in the tradition of artists like Johann Sebastian Bach, dedicating all my work Soli Deo gloria.
Find out more about me here.
•••
“My heart is stirred by a noble theme as I recite my verses for the king; my tongue is the pen of a skillful writer.”
– Psalm 45:1

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