The Novelist: The Importance of Setting in Fiction Writing
June 20, 2010 by Nina Munteanu
Filed under Fiction Writing, Workshops, Writing Tips, Writing Workshops, the novelist
Setting provides an “emotional landscape” upon which a character’s own temperament may play counterpoint or may resonate in a wonderful symphony
—Nina Munteanu (The Fiction Writer)
In my online writing classes and workshops I cover several common pitfalls of beginning writers. One common pitfall is to forget the importance of setting in story. Think of Frodo in Lord of the Rings without his beloved Shire. And what about wayward Dorothy of the Wizard of Oz without her dear home in Kansas and the contrasting Land of Oz…
Setting includes time, place and circumstance. Without a place there is, in fact, no story. In the examples I gave you, place plays a principle role in defining major and minor characters. Like the force in Star Wars, setting provides a landscape that binds everything into context and meaning. For author Richard Russo, it goes beyond place; he suggests that “If you’re not writing stories that occur in a specific place (my emphasis), you’re missing an opportunity to add depth and character to your writing.” He describes some of his students’ responses to his challenge, “where does the story take place?”: it doesn’t really matter, they say; it’s really more about the people. The irony is that we do want to know and, oddly enough, the more specific you get, the more universal your truth becomes. It’s one of those wonderful paradoxes in life that writers need to embrace.
I’ll go even further: settings can not only have character; they can be a character in their own right. A novelist, when portraying several characters, may often find herself painting a portrait of “place”. This is setting being “character”. The setting functions as a catalyst, and molds the more traditional characters that animate a story. The central character is often really the place, which is often linked to the main protagonist (e.g., Scarlet O’Hara and Georgia in the 1860s in Gone With the Wind; Eustacia Vye and Egdon Heath of Thomas Hardy’s Return of the Native; Paul Atriades and the planet Arakis in Dune). In each example I gave, the main character comes to symbolize the setting and vice versa. Setting ultimately portrays what lies at the heart of the story.
In fact, D.H. Lawrence, in commenting about Hardy’s book Return of the Native, suggested that Egdon Heath was the most important character of the story:
Egdon, whose dark soil was strong and crude and organic as the body of a beast.
How you portray setting and place, then, becomes an integral part of the story itself. You can significantly increase metaphoric meaning in your story with a richly textured setting. You can use setting to amplify a character’s emotions or contradict them, depending on the circumstance of the character, her mood, disposition, tendencies, and observational skills. Either way, setting provides an “emotional landscape” upon which a character’s own temperament may play counterpoint or may resonate in a wonderful symphony.
Here are some suggestions that can help every fiction writer create vivid, memorable and meaningful settings:
- Choose your setting purposefully; make it an integral part of the story with meaning (e.g., linking it to your main characters)
- Describe setting selectively, through integration in “scene” rather than exposition.
- Be specific (e.g., beat up Chevy, not car; old clapboard cottage, not house.
- Use similes, metaphors, and personification to breathe life into setting.
- Use the senses like sight, sound, smell, taste, feel.
- Show, don’t tell (e.g., instead of saying the time is the 1920s; show the cars and dresses. Instead of telling the reader it’s raining; show them by describing the dripping trees, etc.)
- Don’t describe setting all at once in the beginning; work it in slowly throughout the story; let it unfold as the story and the characters do.
You can find more about “Setting” in Chapter H in my writing guidebook, The Fiction Writer: Get Published, Write Now! by Starfire World Syndicate (available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble and other quality bookstores).
I discuss “setting” in my workshop, “The Writer’s Toolkit”, a workshop that I give throughout North America. This comprehensive writer’s workshop will be launched on DVD soon and will be available at Amazon as well as online here and on www.NinaMunteanu.com.
tags: online writing courses, online writing classes, The Writer’s Toolkit, fiction writing, becoming a writer, creative writing online, book writing, writing stories, setting in fiction, nina munteanu, The Fiction Writer Get Published Write Now

