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Linda Boyd's avatar

I have to say that I disagree that it is harder to cry reading than watching a movie or play. I think a well written book always gets me on a deeper level. I cry much more often while reading a book. I feel I know the characters better, especially because in a sense, there has been a collaboration between my imagining of the character and the author's words. My mother had the door taken off my bedroom when I was young because she caught me crying and didn't believe for a minute that I was crying over a book!

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Doug Jordan: TravelsWithMyself's avatar

Terry, a few thoughts on today's post re conveying emotion, especially crying, in our writing.

1) I don't remember the particular books in which I actually cried, though there surely were more than a few. Of course the episodes are almost invariably about death and dying. My earliest memory is of Old Yeller dying. During my testosterone driving adolescent years I don't remember being particularly sentimental, merely lovesick, but after my kids were born I became much more inclined to tears for the vulnerably of people and pets.

2) I do recall the poignancy of Angus's diary notes to his deceased wife. At the time I read those books I imagined his loneliness. A decade later those Angus anguish notes took on a much more relevant meaning.

3) The tears of grief came full on in reading Julian Barnes 'Levels of Life' after my wife of almost fifty years died.

4) One of my earliest attempts at writing (an epistolary, still on my hard drive, still unpublished as too personal, even though fictionalized) was about a doomed love affair. I wanted to bring out the intensity, the innocence, the hopelessness and the loss. Music played a part of the story and while a novel is like a movie running in the mind, it lacks a soundtrack. I had the idea that it would be cool (the book would need to be an ebook) if it would be possible to run a soundtrack in parallel with the text. The technology didn't exist then (and may not even now) and so I was confined to words on pages. Nevertheless I included a list of songs that should be listened to while reading the text, and included prompts in parenthesis that such and such a song should play now. Each selection of course reinforces the feeling of the story at that point. Perhaps one day I will go back to that project.

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