How To Write Effective And Believable Dialogue
Published By Casey Quinn • Jul 12th, 2008 • Category: Casey's CornerOne of the most challenging parts of writing is coming up with believable and meaningful dialogue. Dialect, choice of words, tone, all of these things play a role in determining if your dialogue is believable or not.
6 Tips For Effective Dialogue In Your Short Story Writing
- Many people make the mistake of telling the reader something when they should have allowed the characters using dialogue.
- Bad: Tom was very upset with Susan after she left him that night. He was alone when he needed her the most.
- Good: “Susan, I cannot believe you left me alone last night. I needed you more than ever,” Tom said with a tear in his eye.
- Readers are smart. They will figure out more than you think, so feel free to tell less and let your characters do the explaining! Here are some common issues I have seen as well!
- Punctuate Dialogue Correctly! Many times people abuse commas, periods and semi colons in their dialogue. It makes the dialogue clunky and hard to follow. Keep it simple!
- Speak naturally. Do not use formal dialogue unless you are having a conversation between a professor of philosophy and a doctor. People speak with very plain words. Don’t overdo it!
- All speech should advance the story. Revealing something new to the reader about the plot or the character.
- If you only have a few characters, don’t use “he said” / “she said” If the flow is clear; you can get away with not identifying the speaker if the reader is clear on who is doing the talking. If you need to use the “he said” / “she said” then be consistent with it, don’t change it every line to: he said, Said he, he spoke, etc.
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