A Writer’s Weather Companion

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The following articles were written to show how weather can be used effectively as a literary device. This is an ongoing series in tandem with my book Creating Atmosphere with Atmosphere: How to Use Weather as a Literary Device.

Creating Atmosphere with Atmosphere

  • Mark Twain Made Me Write This
    Mark Twain shunned putting weather in books, even though he shows up in a table of authors that mention the weather in the first sentence. Yet human emotion can be drawn out or set by using the weather as a tool.
  • What Could Be Better Than a Book About Weather?
    I ask what could be better than a book about weather, but I know the answer–to me, anyway: nothing.
  • What is Solar Weather?
    The sun can play a part in writing, not only as an obvious source of light, but also as a literary device all its own
  • On Temperature & Emotion
    The emotions drummed up by your characters would also be the emotions that you feel when you are in that situation.
  • On Precipitation & Emotion
    There are many forms of precipitation–from snow to rain to ice crystals and more–and therefore many ways a writer can use it for emotion.
  • Alien Weather
    Alien weather is something I think about quite frequently, not only because it plays into my own writing, but because it’s just neat.
  • On Thunderstorms & Emotion
    The way nature uses thunderstorms to restore balance to an unstable atmosphere is akin to the way a plot is intended to resolve a conflict.
  • On Fog & Emotion
    Like the cat of Carl Sandburg’s poem, fog does not announce itself very well. So how can we use this stealthy behavior as a writing tool?
  • A Little Experiment with Weather & Emotions
    Earlier this year, I did a little study about weather and emotions. Here are some thoughts on what I found.
  • The Thunderstorm Story Model
    I’ve always loved the dynamics behind thunderstorms and recently, I’ve been seeing parallels to the standard plot curve many writers have been taught.
  • On Wind & Emotion
    Just like clouds and emotion go hand-in-hand (with respect to literature, anyway), so does wind and emotion.
  • On Clouds and Emotion
    Clouds and emotion go together when you think about it. We have been trained since birth to recognize signs in the sky, whether we did so deliberately or not.
  • How To: Inhale a Novel Idea (Literally)
    You really can inhale a novel idea, especially if the novel involves dust and you stand in the middle of a dust storm. It’s quite the experience.
  • How To: Create an Atmosphere on Paper
    Writing the weather into a setting–creating an atmosphere–is not that difficult, but you can screw it up. Keep in mind that there are readers out there who have studied meteorology for years, and like anything, the genius is in the details.

Read Other Series Posts
Ink and EnlightenmentUsing Anthropology for World Building
Generative AI for WritersKindle Vella

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