How To Write Descriptions People Want to Read–Dogs
This is the next in the occasional “How to Write Descriptions” series.
If you’re a writer, you know what I mean. You can’t just say, The dog laid down at my feet and fell asleep. That’s boring. It tells the reader nothing about how cute the dog is, how innocent his sleep was, how you reacted to this most loyal of friend doing the most trusting of activities.
I’ve spent years collecting snippets on how to describe characters, create settings, describe actions that I am now going to share with you over a period of, oh, a lot of weeks. I have a 127-page document with categories for things like:
dogs
horses

animals
nature
how eyes move
how mouths move
how faces look
…it goes on and on. Here’s the first page, with links to all my categories:
They are all written by other authors, so don’t use them. Treat them as imagination starters. They force you to think about what it was in your character’s face that gave away his lie. Why the horse in the corral looked so agitated. Those types of descriptions that, being in a book, can only be conveyed with words.
I’ll start with dogs:
The dog snorted happily and bounded forward
The dog curled into a wet lump and lay shivering on the ground
Dog was doing impression of a corpse
He stretched, shook himself and circled several times before dropping to the ground
With pricked ears, he watched for a moment and then yawned
Roaming the backyard, engaged in dog intrigue
Dog’s eyes wide, ears flat, a vibrating growl deep in his chest

Exulting in whatever it is that dogs exult in
dogs wandered off to rest their noses in their paws
roughed them up the way Labs expect to be treated
paws up, aerial
The dog was sprawled across her lap, his sides rising and falling, his nose mashed against the ground in a most uncomfortable-looking manner. Dogs were funny. They could sleep in peculiar positions.
Dogs, after voiding their excrement, often make with all four feet a few scratches backwards, even on a bare stone pavement, Wolves and jackals behave in the same manner, yet, as I am assured by the keepers, neither wolves, jackals, nor foxes, when they have the means of doing so, ever cover up their excrement, any more than do dogs. All these animals, however, bury superfluous

Dogs and jackals take much pleasure in rolling and rubbing their necks and backs on carrion. The odor seems delightful to them. wolves don’t roll in the odor
Dogs scratch themselves with one of their hind-feet; and when their backs are rubbed, they rapidly scratch the air or the ground in a useless and ludicrous manner. by licking the air as if it were a hand.
As he prepares to spring with a savage growl, canine teeth are uncovered, and the ears pressed close backwards on the head
flopped onto the floor in a full doggy snit
happy woofing sounds of a dog discovering hidden treasures

wag its tale and watch with hopeful eyes
dog watched him, ears up, head slightly cocked
dogs, when intently watching and slowly approaching prey, keep one of their fore-legs doubled up for a long time, ready for the next cautious step. they behave in exactly the same manner whenever their attention is aroused. I have seen a dog at the foot of a high wall, listening attentively to a sound on the opposite side, with one leg doubled up
the one which first sees the other, lowers its bead, crouches a little, or even lies down; takes the proper attitude for concealing himself

When a dog approaches a strange dog or man in a savage or hostile frame of mind he walks upright and stiffly; his head slightly raised; tail held erect and rigid; the hairs bristle, especially along the neck and back; the pricked ears are directed forwards, and the eyes have a fixed stare
trotting gravely with high steps, head much raised, moderately erected ears, and tail carried aloft but not stiffly
young dogs in play growling and biting each other’s faces and legs
The dog got worried, crawled up on the bed, raced around chasing a ball, finally chased it out of the room. From her roommates room, she heard her barking, growling at the dog, slapping and playing, tossing the ball and the dog returned. She wondered who thought who was whose pack.
Who could not love a dog?
For more on writing about dogs, check out WayCoolDogs.
More descriptors:
How To Describe Your Character’s Appearance in a Phrase
How to Write Descriptions People Want to Read: Nature
Jacqui Murray is the author of the popular Building a Midshipman, the story of her daughter’s journey from high school to United States Naval Academy. She is the author/editor of dozens of books on integrating tech into education, webmaster for six blogs, an Amazon Vine Voice book reviewer, a columnist for Examiner.com and TeachHUB, Editorial Review Board member for Journal for Computing Teachers, monthly contributor to Today’s Author and a freelance journalist on tech ed topics.
Filed under: characters, descriptors, setting, writers, writers resources Tagged: characterizations, descriptions, writers, writers life, writers resources

