Sunday, August 24, 2025

The Devil’s in the Details by Annette Dashofy

As I’m sure everyone knows by now, it takes a while to write a novel. Some of us take longer than others. I’m not here to debate how long it should take. If you write four books a year, cool. I’m envious. If you write one book every couple of years, cool. I totally get it. 

While it takes a considerable amount of time to write the book, the story usually takes place over a matter of days or weeks. Let’s face it, most of us don’t write family sagas set over decades and generations. 


James A. Michener is not one of our fellow Writers Who Kill. 

My current WIP is set in mid-August, in the very area where I live. Convenient as far as getting all the sensations correct. It’s hot. It’s muggy. It’s sunny, but occasional thunderstorms pop up, dump a bunch of rain, and then the sun comes back out and turns the puddles into steam. There are also bugs. Cicadas buzz in the trees. Spotted Lantern Flies have returned. Orb Weaver spiders construct amazing, often huge, webs. The birds have fallen largely silent. 

Much of this will make it into the book to anchor my readers in this place and time.

However, I started writing it in April. I’ve frequently written stories set in the dead of winter while sweating in July. And vice versa. Since it takes me nine to twelve months to complete a novel, I do usually find myself working on part of it during the actual season in which it’s set. Like my current WIP. But I’m also starting or completing it in a totally different time.

How do I make sure to get the details of setting and all five senses correct? Of course, I’ve lived through enough summers, falls, winters, and springs to remember what they’re like. But will I remember the tiniest detail that might offer the biggest impact? Maybe. Maybe not. (I intentionally forget how annoying Spotted Lantern Flies are.)

Here’s my trick. I already have a folder for story details. Character names and what they look like. What kind of car they drive. Where they live. Their favorite foods and beverages. It’s a simple matter to add a weather/season file. I may have no clue what will happen or what I’ll need to know, so I create a document that resembles a daily diary, except it only includes the little stuff. Chilly mornings, fog lying in the valleys, the mockingbird serenading me from the maple tree, the sweat trickling down my back, the itchiness of bug bites, the smell of fresh cut grass.

Of course, my winter diary is totally different.


Dear readers, do you enjoy the minutiae that place you squarely in a story’s world? And fellow Writers Who Kill, do you have any tricks for including (and remembering) sensory details for your settings? 

9 comments:

  1. My trick is a prayer and a song.

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    1. Debra, in my case, that's true for entire writing process!

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    2. Prayer and song is nicely spiritual. Mine is a wing and a prayer (and then I had to look up that expression's derivation, which it turns out relates to a WWII pilot whose plane had been ravaged and told his crew they were "coming in on a wing and a prayer."

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  2. I take photos of my gardens year-round and remember resident and migrating birds. Smells are tricky. I love all the insects you use. We had two cicada broods in May/June, and now, the annual thrumming of the August cicadas.

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  3. If you can hit the right details, not matter how minute, can give the feel for an entire atmosphere or character for the reader. I think of the Jack Reacher novels, where the details can carry an entire scene.
    Jim, I played "Coming in on a Wing and a Prayer" to set the mood for trying to give students a feel for what it must have been like to live through WWII.

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  4. I write historical mysteries so I rely on newspaper archives that provide weather, special weather events (hurricanes, tornados, flooding--I'm in the South), as well as important local news at the time for some background color, and society pages that describe local flowers and what is blooming when, as well as old pictures and postcards for settings. Old Sanborn maps for streets and building density. I have two historic cemeteries on my property, so I always try to include one name as a secondary character.

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  5. Ohhhh, stealing! I rely on memory, snapshots, and my no longer maintained, but always appreciated nature journal. Our former co-blogger, Gloria Alden, mentioned keeping one, and the idea captivated me as we had newly moved to Maine. I referred to it when I was writing No Return. Strangely, there are no Florida entries.

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  6. Love this. I think there's a happy medium. Just the right details makes the story come alive. Too much and I find myself starting to skim...

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  7. I like the minutiae. I travel through books and knowing what the air feels like in rural Pennsylvania on a Spring Day, after it rains, is totally different from how it feels in the Redwood Empire of north/coastal California. The minutiae can help me "wish I was there" or be very grateful I live where the fog comes creeping in to provide that perfect, natural air conditioning that I love so much.

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