I'm having trouble finding ways to integrate character descriptions into the story. I don't want to just toss them in there, but I can't figure out a way to fit it in there. Help?
Hey there Sir Huron! I haven't seen a post from you in awhile. I'm up late. When I'm on vacation, my writing rips up my time clock.
I agree with Snowleapord on exploring writers who do what you like. I wonder if your descriptions are irritating because they don't mesh in nicely among your action and dialog. Are your descriptions furthering the action? If a description doesn't reveal intimate details about the characters and thus further the plot, then I would rather leave them out.
Is the voice gravely, because your character is a down to earth sort? Does their over the top neatness show how anal retentive they are? Does that young girl have something off that signals a Carrie blowup is going to come eventually? Other examples, let's see--no neck so head rests on a freaking concrete block. Or her fingers were elegant, but her nails curved like deadly spears. Make sure you are using all the senses like smell, touch, hearing etc to make the descriptions more visceral too. A gutter snipe without BO is... well, sanitized! A fine aristocratic lady without her floral scents is probably just a milk maid. A milk maid without a little pungent cow manure on her boots, same thing.
I think of JB and his goon descriptions--always delicious. Ian Rankin's descriptions always gain a color highlight and notations in the books, so I can go back and study them. Charles Dickens' work drips character revealing description like hot fudge on a Sundae. Hemingway and F Scott Fitzgerald's--same thing.
My guess is that right now they aren't integral, because they aren't yet written as integral parts that further the character and the plot. Or I'm full of horse radish...
You'll get some cool ideas here as folk post. One or two of them will click with YOUR style. And I look forward to seeing that icon of yours a bit more often in this section!