First, I remember close to nothing of what was said in that paragraph two sentences later. Second, it is almost always out of character for the person who lists those attributes. I find it especially jarring when it is done in first-person and an otherwise normal person starts to refer to themselves as beautiful or gorgeous. Reading descriptions like this almost always takes me out of the experience, breaks my immersion.
I think good character descriptions usually
- assign meaning to the physical attribute described
- don't happen all at once
- are embedded naturally into the text
1) I read @Shocker's story The Witch Hunt. I think the story features 5 characters in total: 3 male, 2 female. When it comes to their appearance, I can recall one detail about what these characters look like three days after I read the final chapter. One of the two female characters has small boobs. And I remember that because she is self-conscious about her boobs and resents the other woman in the story for having bigger breasts than her. Another detail I remember is that the other woman values her hair a lot, but I couldn't tell you anymore how long or what color it was. The fact that I remember so little is not a bad thing in my opinion. I can't even tell you whether I forgot that information or whether it was never given to me in the first place. Shocker described this himself very well in a discussion we had underneath his Valentina story:
I think that is very poignant insight. I much prefer to get a general feel for what a character looks like than a detailed description.Shocker wrote: Thu Apr 10, 2025 7:43 pm Else I write with putting as much work on the readers fantasy as possible. One doesn’t need detailed descriptions to flesh out a character. I call this the JK Rowling method. Everybody knows how Hermione Granger or Ron Weasley look like. They have a firm picture in their mind, even before the films came out. Now quick question what’s the color of their eyes?
Rowling wrote 7 books, and not once gives that detail. The reader is doing all the heavy lifting.
2) I think it is more effective if certain pieces of information about a character's appearance are drop fed to the reader rather than poured over them in one big exposition dump. In Record Chaser for example, I early on have the female character being described as a "petite girl". She then reflects on that, doesn't like it that she is called that, but admits to being a lightweight in her thoughts. I think that sets the tone for what I called earlier the "general feeling" for what the character looks like. It is only later that I reveal some more details about her appearance. There is for example a conversation where the man she is talking with reveals to her that "he has a thing for freckles", implying that she has freckles without any piece of narration ever actually stating that. I think that this way, the information is much more likely to stick with the reader and it doesn't feel so out of place because it occurs natural as part of the dialogue.
3) In Men at War I have a central character narrate large chunks of the story like a sports commentator. He turns the gang rape of a woman into a livestream spectacle and the description becomes a part of that, advertising her like a product.
This dumps a lot of information on the reader at once, but it also does more than just describe the character's appearance. It fits into the narration style, and communicates how he dehumanizes her and it is written in that upbeat advertisement tone that most of his commentary is written in.Jimmy lifted the veil. The camera moved past him and focused on the naked body of the gagged, blindfolded and unconscious woman.
“Here we have Elizabeth. At 28 years she has still a few good years ahead of her. The curves on that body are truly to die for and those boobs are probably even too big for these giant shovels that Jerome calls his hands. Truly a prime example of a woman at peak fertility. And these are child bearing hips no doubt. She is just wasted on the labor market with such qualities. But guys, don’t be fooled by the blond hair, she is a natural redhead.”
While he uttered that last sentence, the camera zoomed in on her crotch, highlighting the red landing strip above her otherwise clean shaven pussy.
Ok, here ends my hot take on character descriptions. Do you agree that these paragraphs that do nothing but list physical attributes of a character are bad? Do you want to know the exact cup size of a woman's breast or how tall exactly a character is in centimeters or inches? Do you agree with Shocker to let the reader's fantasy do the heavy lifting?