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IWW Practice-W Exercise Archives
Exercise:
Sound Off! (v. 3)

These exercises were written by IWW members and administrators to provide structured practice opportunities for its members. You are welcome to use them for practice as well. Please mention that you found them at the Internet Writers Workshop (http://www.internetwritingwor kshop.org/).

Originated by: Lani Kraus
Posted on: Mar. 11, 2001
Reposted, revised, on Sept. 10, 2006.
Reposted, revised, on Aug. 3, 2008.

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Exercise: Write a scene of no more than 300 words in which you employ sound to help show us your characters or to help set your scene.

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Writers tell their stories largely by using the sense of sight--we learn what characters and scenes look like. Sounds, smells, tastes often get short shrift.

But read this line by Joyce Carol Oates (from "We Were the Mulvaneys"):

"Marianne's pretty face lit up in its customary dazzling smile. 'Hi, Della Rae!'--the very voice, a lilting soprano, of Caucasian privilege."

Doesn't that description of a sound tell us something? Can you hear it? In your submission, use whatever words you need to let us hear the sounds that help show your characters or help us to see your setting. Of course, you'll use other senses as well, but make sure that sound plays a significant part.

Birds sing in the back yard or the forest, dogs sometimes howl in the dark, exploding
bombs create a din, cars honk on the street outside my building. We're constantly surrounded by sound, and often it serves to help orient us, to show us where we are and what's going on. Your characters are in the same boat--let them hear as well as see.

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Exercise: Write a scene of no more than 300 words in which you employ sound to help show us your characters or to help set your scene.

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When critiquing, tell us wehther the author's use of the sense of sound works or doesn't work to show us something about character, setting, emotion that we otherwise might not notice. How does sound color or deepen the story?


Web site created by Rhéal Nadeau and the administrators of the Internet Writing Workshop.
Modified by Gayle Surrette.