Show, don’t tell is the principle that fiction is more effective when the writer dramatizes — presents action, dialogue, and sensory detail — rather than stating conclusions directly. Instead of “She was angry,” the writer shows: “She set the glass down hard enough to crack the stem.”
The principle originates with Anton Chekhov’s advice: “Don’t tell me the moon is shining; show me the glint of light on broken glass.” It was formalized in craft pedagogy throughout the twentieth century and remains the most commonly taught fiction principle — and the most commonly misapplied.
The misapplication is treating “show, don’t tell” as an absolute rule. It is not. Telling (summary, exposition, narrator commentary) is a legitimate and necessary technique. A novel that showed everything would be impossibly long and tediously paced. The principle is better understood as: show what matters. When a moment is emotionally significant, when a character’s action reveals who they are, when the reader needs to feel the weight of an event — show it through scene. When time needs to pass, when context needs to be established, when the reader needs information efficiently — tell it through summary.
Wayne Booth argued that the showing/telling distinction is itself rhetorical: both showing and telling are authorial choices that shape the reader’s response, and the question is not which is better but which serves the narrative at this point [@booth1961]. Even showing is a form of telling — the writer chose which details to include, which to omit, and what order to present them in.
Related terms
- scene — the narrative mode where showing occurs
- dialogue — a primary technique for showing character through speech
- narrator — the narrator’s balance of showing and telling controls distance and pacing
- character — showing is most important when revealing character
- point of view — POV determines what can be shown and what must be told