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Heck, there are whole herds of gazes grazing on my pages. Inevitably, they are culled.
My hero(ine)'s gazes also have superpowers, they can size up the opposite sex, within a millisecond (Warning: objects on the page may take longer to assess than in real life)-- not only age, height, and weight, but also the turquoise and gold flecks floating in the depths of emerald 'gazes'. Streaks of rich auburn in glossy chestnut tresses are pin-pointed, and confidence aquired that waists could be spanned with one hand. The hardness (iron) of biceps, chest and thighs is judged, along with other other, a-hem, iron-like accoutrements (ie: hero's hung like a horse) in the thigh area. Lips are pronounced soft, cruelly thin, or colored like cherries. All this knowledge acquired from just....one....gaze (and 5 paragraphs).
Example from the current wip:
“Why not execute me here?” she snapped, control breaking, and looked at him for the first time.
She already knew he was a large man, overwhelming in breadth and height, but now she saw the heavy jaw and crooked nose. He wore his hair extremely short; yet even in the dimness it shone golden, lighter by several shades than his brows and neatly trimmed beard and moustache.
His shirt was rough-spun cambric. His long coat made of thick supple leather that swept down to where his pants tucked into a pair battered boots.
From a sheath strapped to one powerful thigh, the handle of a dagger stuck out, while the hilt of his sword rose at a slant behind his broad shoulders.
But it was his gaze that cautioned her from further outbursts: Light in hue, dark in contemplation.
Honestly? I rather like that example. But the dreaded romance novel 'inventory gaze' can go horrible, horrible wrong, setting one's teeth on edge in a frothing backwash of cliché after cliché.
Over on the Jennifer Crusie/Bob Meyer's blog-- He Said, She Said-- JC makes a very good argument for keeping those 'looks' to a minimum and how to use them in the most effective way to reveal character. Take a gander. (yuk,yuk,yuk)
3 comments:
>>Light in hue, dark in contemplation.
You have such a way with words =)
LOL@Cruises gazing post. that was a riot but scary in the degree of truthfullness to it. Ok I have some contest entries to judge *shudder*
Ditto on your descriptions, Jaye, which are always good. :-)
Why, my gaze had barely swept over the triumphant word 'GALORE!', lingered on the weeping writer cartoon, followed the chiaroscura figures on the film of one penguin sucker-punching another before I knew this would be a well-hung post, and...
Okay, okay I'm going... *ggg*
Thanks, hon. You're not to shabby yourself, Ms Newly Contracted. ;-)
LOL. Leave it to you, Raine.
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