The Delayed Reaction: Let Emotions Arrive Late
Ernest Hemingway masterfully employed this technique throughout his work. In 'A Farewell to Arms,' when Catherine Barkley dies, Frederic Henry's reaction is notably restrained in the immediate aftermath. He walks back to the hotel in the rain, and the reader feels the weight of what he hasn't expressed. The emotion is all the more devastating for being held back.
Gabriel García Márquez uses delayed reaction in 'Love in the Time of Cholera' when Fermina Daza smells her husband's cologne after his death and only then fully confronts her loss—weeks after the funeral. The mundane sensory trigger makes the grief feel utterly real.
Practical exercise: Take a scene you've written where a character reacts immediately to news. Rewrite it with a 'buffer period' of ordinary activity. Notice how the tension shifts and the eventual emotional moment gains weight.
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