Have you ever heard the term “flying body parts”? Flying
body parts occur when the parts act independently of the person.
Most of us are guilty of occasionally writing them into our
work. They do slip in, especially with eyes. Her eyes swept the room. We all know what that means, but such
statements conjure up bizarre pictures and can take the reader right out of the
story. Do you see the eyes floating around, controlling the broom? Magic of an
unintended kind!
If the person (as opposed to the body part) performs the
action, the logic doesn’t jar the reader so much. If body parts, usually hands,
feet, or eyes, perform the action, they can create a weird image of the part
acting independently of the person. They’re often called flying body parts.
Examples:
Even though readers know what the sentence means, these
images can yank them out of the story. Read those body part lines carefully to
see if they convey the correct image.
Sometimes, even when the person performs the action, the
verb doesn’t work. She shot her eyes at him. It makes the reader wonder how,
with a sling shot? She tossed her hand in the air, dismissing him. She can toss
her hair but not her hand, or she could wave her hand.
Have you ever been guilty? Have any good examples to share?
3 comments:
I have definitely been guilty. I have to catch myself. Also, I see top name writers doing the body parts thing. Where are their editors? Have these errors become acceptable?
You caught me. LOL I do let some of these slip through. It's just that I hear and read them all the time and don't think much about it.
What's odd is, I do beta reads and catch this kind of thing all the time, but don't catch my own writing.
Polly and Laura, I'm guilty too. It's always easier to spot things in others' work than my own. I just hope my beta readers spot them, and they usually do.
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