The Period Part 1: Lots o' dots
How frequent and deliberate use of the humble period can create maximum impact
First, I’ll tell you what we are not going to discuss in this article—when to use a period according to the rules of usage for the English language. While that's important (although not as intuitive as one might think), this article will instead focus on using the period deliberately and selectively to enhance your writing and your story. For now, I’ll leave the technical guidance to the Chicago Manual of Style (or whatever style guide you love best). What we’re going to explore are different ways to utilize the period and short sentence length to make stylistic choices.
Second, I’ll admit that much of what I’m about to discuss appears in Noah Lukeman’s excellent book A Dash of Style: The Art and Mastery of Punctuation. This FABULOUS book focuses on ways to use punctuation to enhance creative writing. It is NOT a dry style guide that lists the correct ways to use periods, commas, semicolons, etc. I highly recommend it to anyone looking to improve their dexterity as a writer.
Lukeman calls the period the “stop sign” of punctuation; it’s a cue to the reader that the sentence and the thought it contains are complete. Technically, a sentence should include at least a subject and a verb, but even sentences that don’t adhere to that rule should, at a minimum, contain a complete thought or idea. Writers push the limits of the period all the time. Depending on the mood, subject, character, or content of the story, a writer might choose to use the period often and for dramatic effect, or the writer might suspend period usage for a time and stretch out a sentence for many lines (possibly a page) to create a specific tone or combine a series of ideas into a continuous line.
In this article, we’ll cover why a writer might want to keep their sentences short by using the period often and with vigor. Here are some reasons why you might want to opt for a short sentence length:
Because Less is More.
Many authors choose to open their books with a short, but full idea. Last month, LitReactor columnist Meredith Borders offered us a list of The Top 10 Best Opening Lines of Novels.1 At least half of the authors she included used short sentences in their opening. For example, Nabokov opened Lolita with these three short sentences:
Lolita. Light of my life, fire of my loins. My sin, my soul.
These three musings give the reader both a glimpse of the title character, Lolita, and the narrator/protagonist, Humbert Humbert. As required, each sentence contains a complete thought, though they may not be complete sentences. The sentence “Lolita.” does not contain a verb or a clear subject. It’s just a name, but a name (the reader will learn) weighted with meaning and steeped in Humbert’s perverse obsession. The next two sentences are also powerful images. Each contains contrasting ideas of pleasure mixed with wrongdoing. The structure suggests that the three sentences, and the ideas they contain, are equally weighted. Lolita=joy & sex=sin & soul. As such, the three ideas become one idea as each element contributes to the other. In a sense, the entire novel is contained in these three short, but strong, declarations.
To Create Drama.
If we compare reading a story to taking a walk, a sentence might equal a step with the period being the moment the walker’s foot touches the ground. As such, more periods equal more steps and more steps equal more distance. Writers use short sentences to convey a lot of information in a short amount of space. Each sentence must be a complete thought, so a string of short sentences can move the reader quickly through a lot of ideas without using a lot of words or taking up too much space on the page. The choice to move quickly through ideas depends on the style and tone you are trying to create in your story. Short sentences can seem choppy, juvenile, overly simplistic when not used properly. You wouldn’t want to read an entire novel that went like this:
Taylor woke up. She made coffee. She read the paper. The headline said, “Zombie Apocalypse Arrives.” Taylor put down the paper. Taylor loaded her rifle. She went into the street. She shot each zombie she saw square in the forehead.
While the topic might be drama-filled and action-packed, the writing conveys none of that. The sentences are short, but flat. By knowing to when to keep the sentence short and when to make it longer, this passage could be significantly improved. Let’s try:
Though Taylor woke up at her usual time, made her usual cup of coffee, and read her usual morning paper, it wasn’t a usual morning. The headline said “Zombie Apocalypse Arrives.” Taylor dropped the paper. She loaded her rifle. She ran into the street. She shot the zombies one-by-one. Bang. Bang. Bang.
While certainly not a masterpiece, my second version indicates that the short sentences have a different meaning that the long ones. The first sentence is long, with multiple clauses and ideas, but when Taylor learns of the zombie hoards, the pace picks up with each sentence getting shorter, and the pace of the passage quickens. The shorter sentences are not much changed from the original, but the purpose is more clearly defined. I wanted to pick up the pace, and my clue to the reader is to add more periods (or steps) in selective locations to indicate this shift in speed and tone. Writers frequently utilize shorter sentences to denote action, speed, panic, excitement, etc.
To Be Direct.
Writers like Hemmingway and Carver are known for using short sentences. Neither used them, necessarily, to create drama or action. In fact, some of Hemmingway’s work can be downright slow (if you ask me). Still, these two authors, and others like them, use the period to write direct, clear sentences. Their prose is not flowery or overly complex; they do not flex their literary muscles on the page.
While there is merit to being able to write a 25-line sentence in which you use nearly every punctuation mark, clause type, and conjunction available in the English language (see Charles Dickens), it’s not necessary. Amateur writers do this a lot. When I taught freshman composition, students frequently used wordy, overly stylized prose in their essays. Sometimes, the student had a great idea hidden in there under all the wordiness but they just didn’t know how to get it out. Sometimes the student was just trying to get more words in order to reach the minimum word count. Either way, the effect was that their writing was wobbly, made weak by too many words and too few ideas.
Carver and his ilk knew better. Their writing is direct, solid, to-the-point. Their ideas are up front and center, and the reader doesn’t have to track back through adjectives, complex verbs, and multiple subjects to find the meaning of the sentence. Let’s look at this example from Raymond Carver’s short story "Cathedral" reprinted in the Norton Anthology of Short Fiction, 6th Edition. 2
We dug in. We ate everything there was to eat on the table. We ate like there was no tomorrow. We didn’t talk. We ate. We scarfed. We grazed the table. We were into serious eating. The blind man had right away located his foods, he knew just where everything was on his plate. I watched with admiration as he used his knife and fork on the meat. He’d cut two pieces of the meat, fork the meat into his mouth, and then go all out for the scalloped potatoes, the beans next, and then he’d tear off a hunk of buttered bread and eat that. He’d follow this up with a big drink of milk. It didn’t seem to bother him to use his fingers once in a while, either.
Carver uses a series of short sentences to start this paragraph followed by long, more descriptive ones. While there is action happening in the scene, it’s not an action scene exactly. The short sentences do not serve to speed up the dinner scene so much as to make a succession of points about how the characters approached the meal. The sentences that starts with “We” to describe the overall environment of the meal—a quiet but hungry group of people eagerly devouring their dinners. The descriptions of the blind man eating slow the moment down as if to show how the narrator’s attention is drawn away from his own meal to watch the blind man. The longest sentence is a significant 38-words long, but it’s slowed down by commas. The long sentence describes a single process—the blind man eating—with multiple steps—cutting the meat, eating the meat, eating the potatoes, eating the beans, and finally eating the bread. Whether long or short, each sentence is conscientiously laid out. Each contains a direct idea, easy to define subjects, and clear, unadorned description. The scene is rich and full of vigorous detail without being flowery or drawn out.
Now it’s your turn.
This time, I am going to borrow an exercise straight from Lukeman’s book. It’s a short, but enlightening, experiment you can do with your own work. Here’s the exercise verbatim from Lukeman:
Choose a long sentence from your manuscript, ideally one already in a cluster of long sentences. To decide if it needs shortening, consider the following: Does it comprise several ideas? Is it hard to grasp? Is it hard to catch one’s breath? Does its length match other sentence lengths? Find a way to shorten it, without combining it with the material in the sentence preceding or following it. How much can you shorten it? Was there any extraneous material here? Can you apply this technique elsewhere in your work?
If you would like to share your process with us, post both the original sentence and the revised sentences in the comments section. Explain a bit why you chose the sentence and how you worked with it. You can also tell us whether or not you think that shortening helped/hurt/or made no effect at all. Thanks for reading, and as always, you can send me correspondence directly to taylor@litreactor.com.3
This article was originally published on LitReactor.com on January 18th, 2012. When I first started writing grammar and craft-themed articles for LR, I intended to engage the readers in a mini workshop of sorts by ending each article with a writing prompt.
While I did get a fair number of readers and commenters on the articles, I rarely had anyone attempt writing something and sharing what they wrote with me. After a while, I gave up putting the prompts at the end, but I enjoyed thinking that maybe someone found inspiration from what I wrote and perhaps tried out my prompts on whatever they were working on.
Also, while this was my first article that directly addressed grammatical topics like punctuation, that is not what this article is about. You will see in the opening paragraphs that I was focusing on how to use punctuation creatively.
If you found this article interesting or inspiring, I sure would love to hear about it. You can post a comment here or on my Instagram page @The.Grammar.School.
I’m sorry, but this link no longer works. If anyone knows where I can find Meredith Borders’ article now, I’d love to link it here. Also, it clearly wasn’t just published last month—it was published on LitReactor.com in late 2011. Just another reason to cry about what we lost when lost LitReactor….
I included the link to the edition that I have, and the one I used to write this article. There are later editions, of course.
Do not email me at litreactor.com. I won’t get it. But if you do try this experiment, you can message me here on Substack. Or put it into the comments below.
I'll play...
Here's the periodic original:
Supposedly, a toxic miasma saturated everything within the walls of The Poplars and clung to valuable objects even after they were removed from the house. Plunderers who ignored the warnings and tried their luck inside one moonless night would be found a day or so later, their hands blackened and withered, wandering along a lonely road with no knowledge of how they came to be there. And, naturally, whatever they’d stolen was nowhere to be found unless you happened to look for it back in its original spot inside The Poplars, where it would sit, still covered in the dust of years’ neglect as if it had never been moved.
And here's the edit:
Supposedly, a toxic miasma saturated everything within the walls of The Poplars. It clung to the old house’s treasures, even after they were removed. Still, plunderers ignored the warnings. The unlucky thief would be found, days later, hands blackened and withered, wandering a lonely road with no knowledge of how he came to be there. And whatever he had tried to steal was safe in its original nook inside The Poplars, covered in the dust of years neglect. As if it had never been touched.
Thanks as always for the tips!