Avoid Cliches to Make Your Writing Sparkle

Engage the Reader by Avoiding Cliches in Your Fiction Writing

Melanie L. Marten
There is a large contingent of writers who say cliches are cliches, because they work. A cliche is any phrase or comparison that is overdone and overused.

Examples of Cliches

Her eyes were as blue as the sky.

Her teeth shone like pearls.

The boy was as smart as a whip.

The job was as easy as pie.

I bet you have heard all of these before. Do they work? Yeah. When you read each one, you know exactly what the writer means. Cliches do not confuse the reader, or make writing unintelligible. They just make it flat and boring.

Who wants to read something that they've read one thousand times before? That is why you should avoid cliches.

Cliches also show a certain degree of laziness on the part of the writer. Using a cliche is easy. But it also generic, and does little to describe the details of the particular thing you are describing. Avoiding the cliche will impart more information to your reader.

So, how do you get rid of cliches? Practice and a lot of re-writing. Doing writing exercises can help you learn how to rewrite cliches into engaging, sparkling descriptions.

Try to rewrite this: Her eyes were as blue as the sky.

What do you get?

Here are some examples of non-cliche descriptions that give the reader more interesting information than the cliche ever could.

1) Her eyes were the color of a high-Summer sky, clear and stark.

2) Her eyes sparkled like saphires on black velvet.

3) Her eyes were the same milky blue as my mother's eyes were before I killed her.

All of these sentences mean the exact same thing, but give entirely new information that can help the reader not only learn more, but enjoy the writing more as well.

Plot cliches are also important to avoid. A plot cliche, like a descriptive cliche, is something that is overused and unoriginal. "The butler did it," is a perfect example. That plot device has become a catch phrase for cliches in mystery stories.

Plot cliches may be more difficult to avoid. After all, there are only so many things that can actually happen during a book. However, the mark of a quality writer is that they are able to take the same old plot devices and make them sparkle.

Instead of having the butler kill the rich employer for years of dismal servitude, spring something unexpected on the reader. Perhaps you could have the detective kill the rich man, and try to pin it on the butler!

Avoiding cliches in plot and description is essential for creating a quality fiction story. Writing without cliches can take some practice and creative thinking, but you and your readers will win in the end.

Published by Melanie L. Marten

Melanie Marten is self-taught and self-employed. Besides freelance writing, she dabbles in website design and owns dozens of websites and blogs. Work is squeezed in between parenting two boys, homeschoolin...  View profile

  • There is a large contingent of writers who say cliches are cliches, because they work.
  • A cliche is any phrase or comparison that is overdone and overused.
  • Plot cliches are also important to avoid.
Twisitng cliches is a great idea.

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  • Wesley2/17/2009

    Thank you for this. I've been writing something and I keep finding myself using cliches even as I try not to.

  • Joe Campbell8/15/2008

    Cliches are overused, I can't even stand using my own creation more than once even in another piece of work. It is the same reason in an action film the protagonist will not suppress or evade the antagonist the same way twice. It has already been used. audiences are hungry for a new angle. Cliches are not fine china, they are paper plates. Throw it away and go get a new one. Thank you for posting this, it definitely helps.

  • Bobby Bahdper Sunn9/17/2007

    Thank you very much for posting this! This was more helpful to me than anything I have read on cliches today, and I'm sure that my writing will improve immensely as soon as I get rid of those troublesome cliches.

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