The Emotion Amplifier: A Writer's Guide to Character Stress and Volatility
Second Edition
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- $6.99
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- $6.99
Publisher Description
Characters who are in control of their emotions rarely slip up, which makes for boring reading. To avoid that pitfall, channel your dark side and introduce stress that will make it harder for them to think clearly. Your weapon of choice? An amplifier. Pain, arousal, dehydration—conditions and states like these make it difficult for a character to emotionally self-regulate, setting them up for overreactions, misjudgments, and (hopefully) colossal mistakes they’ll have to fix and learn from.
Inside The Emotion Amplifier Thesaurus, you’ll find:
· A deep dive into cognitive and emotional dissonance and how psychological discomfort steers a character’s reasoning and impacts their ability to make decisions
· Information on emotional stress as a trigger for self-awareness and personal growth, which makes amplifiers powerful levers to help steer story structure and character arc
· Lists of body language cues, internal sensations, thoughts, and other descriptives to show the effects of more than fifty amplifiers
· Brainstorming help on how to use each amplifier to generate tension and complication, apply everyday pressure, and make a character emotionally volatile
· Fifty-two bonus writing tips to help you wield amplifiers with skill and precision, taking your scenes from good to great
Push your characters. Give them no quarter. Use physical, cognitive, and psychological strain to force them to face their mistakes, acknowledge their true feelings, and work through the contradictions at the heart of every inner struggle.
Customer Reviews
Another great (updated) tool!
I received an early copy of the Emotion Amplifier Thesaurus, and it is another great tool investment. I have bought all Angela Ackerman and Becca Puglisi’s Thesaurus' because these indispensable tools have elevated my writing skills exponentially. This new expanded edition of the Emotion Amplifier is another step up.
When a character has to react, even if you (the writer) know how they feel, or should be feeling, it can be difficult to come up with descriptions other than 'he said sadly', or 'she looked angry,' or 'he was bored,' etc. This is a great kickstart to look up those emotions and put them into body language and actions that shows (not tells!) how our characters are acting and reacting.
I prefer the PDF version(s) so I can have them open on one screen while working on my manuscript on the other. It is easy to do a quick search for the emotion (feeling) and find all the actions associated with it. The pdf also makes it easy, using the hyperlinks to quick and easily find companion definitions and action.
The proof is in the pudding. My readers comment and compliment the elevation of writing skills and descriptions. If you are a writer, I highly recommend this tool. Refer to it often and watch your reader engagement soar!
-Randy L