Dear readers,
Today’s post is all about filter words, what they are, how to find them, how to get rid of them, and how this can improve your prose. I am still in the process of editing my first novel, Juice of Half a Lemon, before I start submitting it. I finished the first draft in April of 2017, and have since progressed to draft number 8. Along the way, I have discovered many recurring flaws in my writing, one of which is overusing filter words.
Filter words are verbs like saw, heard, knew, and felt that distance the reader from the action of the story by putting a character between them.
I’ve always thought of it like this: filtering forces the reader to see the action from behind the character, rather than seeing it through the character’s eyes.
For example,
*He saw the woman take a knife out of her bag.
In this sentence, saw is a filter word. This forces the reader to see the character see the woman, rather than just seeing the woman for themselves. Without filtering, the action feels more immediate.
*The woman took a knife out of her bag.
I’ve found that the most common filter words in my writing are knew and felt.
*She knew she couldn’t tell Edward her real name. —-> She couldn’t tell Edward her real name.
*She felt an ant crawl up her arm. —-> An ant crawled up her arm.
Filtering relates back to the old rule that we’ve all heard a million times, show don’t tell. Instead of telling the reader what the character sees, knows, feels, tastes, or hears, show them the action and let them see, know, taste, or hear it themselves.
If you’re past your structural edits and are ready to clean up your prose on a line level, try checking your manuscript for filter words. The search tool is your best friend.
Ctrl + F : saw, heard, knew, felt, tasted, could see, could hear, and could feel
Removing these filter words tightened my prose, improved the sentence flow, reduced the word count, and made the story’s action feel a lot more immediate.
I wish you all the best with your manuscript edits; I know it can be a grueling process.
Thanks for reading,
Tamara Drazic
Hey thank you for this post I’m new to writing fiction and you’ve made me realise I make this mistake plenty...
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Hi! I am a robot. I just upvoted you! I found similar content that readers might be interested in:
https://tamaradrazic.com/2018/02/26/all-about-editing-filter-words/
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Awesome!! Post Glad to see a writer here in Steemit. This platform will do you wonders especially when your works of art graces the blogposts.
Let me know if you've got knew fiction stories coming out here, I'll be sure to give it a boost. Sadly this post is already six days old but would be happy to send one on your next post. :)
one post every seven days, darlin' ... seven days .. the time for one beat of the divine heart or its pointless voting
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