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How Not to Turn a Setting Into a Travelogue
One of the great joys of writing is building up settings that bring readers into the space that you see your characters in, whether that place exists in real life or is imagined. Yet, there’s a fine line between creating that environment and drowning a story in travelogue-style descriptions. Reader overload when it comes to setting details happens frequently in books I review and as much as I love geography, architecture, and local customs, it will completely stall the story when not done correctly. Here are strategies to keep your settings lifelike but balanced, so they enhance rather than dominate.
1. Focus on What the Characters Notice
Settings are most effective when filtered through the perceptions of your characters. Rather than giving an objective rundown of a city’s landmarks or climate, describe what catches your protagonist’s eye and, through their point of view, we need to know why it matters. Is the crumbling facade of an old theater nostalgic for them, or does it bring up feelings of dread? Does the scent of street food tug at a memory, or is it painful due to their hunger? By anchoring description in character experience, you keep the setting tied to the story.
2. Tie the Details into Action
Rather than dedicating large chunks of text to describing the setting, integrate details into action. A chase through narrow streets will show their winding nature, the rough cobblestones, and the shadows of overhanging balconies, all without breaking the pace. An attempt to hide in a crowd of wedding revelers, and nearly knocking over a silver platter of dhokla bites, keeps the story moving forward without a break to describe the unnecessary. When setting details are embedded in what’s happening, they feel organic and unforced.
3. Be Selective
Less is more when it comes to description. Readers don't need to know every element of a landscape; we only need to know how it makes the character feel, or what it represents to the character at that exact moment. The right detail, well-placed, will convey more than a paragraph of generic imagery.
4. Prioritize Plot and Character
The setting must always serve the story and not the other way around. Often I will include in a review that a place or a city in a book felt like a character itself. When I say that, it isn't because the author described every nook and cranny. It's because it was a partner to the character. The protagonist might be in the shadow of a cathedral, but it cannot overshadow them to the reader. Ask yourself how each description supports the plot or develops characters, and use settings only to draft things like a hurdle, an opportunity, or an emotion—not static backdrops.
5. Avoid Info-Dumping
It’s tempting to share everything you’ve researched about a location or a place that you've visited and loved but resist the urge. Information should be dispensed sparingly and only when it directly serves the story. Readers don’t need a history lesson about a castle in the middle of a carriage rolling up unless its past directly affects the present story. I adore Windsor but wasn't thrilled when a story I was reading gave me turn-by-turn directions, nor did a complete breakdown of what the students at Eton wear do anything to advance the plight of a protagonist racing to catch the bus.
If the need to describe an entire place in detail overcomes you, go ahead and write it all down. Then, do yourself and your reader a favor by plucking out only the absolutely necessary and allow the reader to imagine the rest.
Written by Readers’ Favorite Reviewer Jamie Michele