Articles
Dialogue
isn't so much read as it is heard by the reader. The eyes see the words
on the page, the brain processes the thought, but then that little
voice we all have in the back of our head becomes the character and
actually says the words.
We immediately hear those words and decide whether the dialogue is legitimate. We decide whether the character, as we know him or her so far, would
actually talk that way. If we don't know the character at all, we use a
very broad baseline and decide whether we'd accept a stranger on the
street talking that way.
So to develop a winning technique for
writing dialogue, you've got to listen to the way people speak. Family
members, relatives, strangers, people on the telephone. What do they
sound like?
You'll notice that they almost all speak in short
sentences. Two, perhaps three sentences at the most before they expect
someone else to chime in.
Their paragraphs really do focus on just one thought or idea.
Our
society abhors a vacuum, so a pause happens between speakers, not in
the middle of one person's thought. That's also why a pause can be one
of the most powerful dialogue tools when it's used in a play. The
audience wants someone to say something, anything, to relieve the level
of anticipation.
When people speak, they use simple language.
Yes, I've know a few people who can speak wonderfully with an extensive
vocabulary and make it sound totally natural. But that's the exception.
Make your dialogue very simplistic.
If you actually transcribed
what people say as they talk, and then read it a few days later, you'd
really have a tough time understanding what they were saying. The ums,
the ahs, the tics, the embarrassed laughter, the stops and starts.
They'd actually read like idiots.
But when we listen to those
people, we filter out all that verbal debris. So when you write
dialogue, don't include it. You become the debris filter. Your dialogue doesn't become more realistic simply because the
character reads like an imbecile, unless you want your character to
actually come across that way.
Unless you're writing a play,
keep dialogue to an absolute minimum. Don't tell, show. Don't have a
character explain a situation if describing the scene that does the
same thing.
Also, people don't talk to themselves out loud, and their inner thoughts rarely take the form of dialogue. You'll have to come up with a solution to that one for your story.
An
excellent example of this is the movie Castaway, with Tom Hanks. It
isn't until we need some explanation that Wilson, a companion
volleyball, makes an appearance.
Accents are fun, and Mark Twain
received high praise as a writer who finally wrote the way people
spoke. But if you have a lot of dialogue, a heavy southern accent can
become tiresome on the printed page. Tell the reader the character
speaks with a southern accent and let them mentally fill in the drawl.
Finally,
keep the "he saids," and "she saids" to a minimum. At any point in
great dialogue the reader should know who's talking without much
assistance from the author.
Steve Manning is a master writer showing thousands of people how they can write their book faster than they ever thought possible. Here's your free Special Report, Write A Book Now.
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