Advanced Composition – Character Sketch Essay

When Jerry Springer walks into the NBC building in Chicago, where he tapes his show, The Jerry Springer Show, his head is down and his shoulders are rolled forward. He lopes forward, moving surprisingly quickly over the linoleum, not looking anyone square in the eye. He is the very picture of the vacationing Southern California used-car salesman. He is wearing nice blue-jeans, clunky black loafers, a nice leather jacket and smudged glasses. His hair is still wet from his morning shower. He is keeping to himself. He isn’t saying much. Then he rounds a corner, and up comes his head, up comes a smile, up comes his voice. Now he is Jerry Springer, the Jerry of “Jer-ry! Jer-rey!,” of exposed breasts, of your girlfriend who is actually a boy. (Erik Hedegaard, Rolling Stone, May 14, 1998)

The above passage attempts to capture a distinctive person and communicate his essence to the reader. It’s a combination of physical traits, actions and attitude. In this short excerpt we get a sense of the character right away, and while this writer only had the space of one paragraph in which to operate, you’ll have an entire essay. So, capture a character on paper…kind of like a portrait on a canvas, but movin’ and stuff.

 Select a distinctive person & brainstorm everything you know about him or her

 Provide a physical description of this person, picking out a few distinctive physical details and focus on these (don’t simply list traits; paint a picture)

 Focus on a particular action this person might be engaged in, or focus on a particular moment that illustrates who this person is

 Through the combination of the above elements, convey an encapsulating impression of this person and the effect s/he has on you or others (don’t simply state that “she makes you feel loved,” or that “he’s a cold, heartless boss” – remember to show us rather than tell us!!)

 Concentrate on grabbing the reader’s attention at the outset & leaving a powerful impression at the conclusion (remember the “medieval marketplace”)

 Try to “paint” this character so well that the reader could see and possible respond to him/her

Advanced Composition – Character Sketch Essay Evaluation

Ideas & Content (20 points)

Topic is narrow & manageable

Relevant, telling, quality details go beyond obvious

Reasonably accurate details

Writing from experience/ ideas fresh & original

Reader’s questions are anticipated & answered

Demonstrates Insight

Organization: (10 points)

Powerful intro invites reader in

Powerful conclusion leaves reader pondering

Thoughtful/effective transitions

Logical & effective sequencing/arrangement

Pacing is well controlled/services effect

Flow is smooth & unnoticeable

Voice: (10 points)

Reader feels strong interaction with writer

Writer willingly takes risk

Tone & voice add appropriate flavor

Writing is honest, personal/reflects strong commitment

Word Choice: (20 points)

Words are specific & accurate

Words, phrases create pictures & linger in reader’s mind

Natural language/Not overdone, over the top

Striking language catches reader’s eye/ear

Lively verbs, precise nouns, vivid modifiers

Precision is obvious

Sentence Fluency: (20 points)

Sentences enhance the meaning

Sentences vary in length & structure

Purposeful & varied sentence starts

Creative & appropriate connectives

The writing has cadence, pace, flow

Conventions: (10 points)

Correct spelling

Correct punctuation

Correct grammar & usage

Sound & effective paragraphing

Conventions deftly manipulated for stylistic effect

Presentation: (10 points)

Typed appropriately

Proper title page

Engaging title

TOTAL: