Showing posts with label Metaphor Musings and James Lee Burke. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Metaphor Musings and James Lee Burke. Show all posts

Friday, May 20, 2011

Metaphors Musings and James Lee Burke

Metaphors are a great way of conveying imagery, meaning or mood with brevity and impact.

Rather than a paragraph describing in detail the vines on a spooky house, consider something like this: “Vines, like tentacles, climbed the east wall.” If you don’t like similes: “The vine’s tentacles clung to the bricks …”

James Lee Burke is a master. In Rain Gods (page 5) he uses a simile to describe shell casings, to create a macabre mood and to foreshadow the finding of dead bodies: “Scattered about the churches interior, glinting like gold teeth, were dozens of shell casings.”

Of course metaphors are a great way to convey the feelings of a POV character: “He felt a pressure band tightening around his head.” Or how that character perceives something or someone; for example, the character looks at someone whose “eyes are like marbles pushed into tallow”—same book, at page 201.

As for an image: “a rear like a washtub”— at 150.”