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Unit 4: Dialogue Writing




               Exposition and dialogue only really engage when one character genuinely doesn’t know   notes
               what the other character is telling them and it’s natural for them to explain at the moment
               they’re explaining it.

          l    Use the Rule of Twelve: Look at any good dialogue and count the words between punctuation
               marks. You’ll rarely find more than twelve. In official situations also we speak in short burst
               of words, and your characters should do the same. If you find longer phrases and clauses in
               your dialogue, shorten them. Use twelve as a maximum, and aim for exchanges of half that
               many words to keep dialogue brief and crisp.

          l    Write Dialogue that uses distinct voices: Readers should have no problems in distinguishing
               one character from another. We should be able to recognize the characters by what each
               character says and how he or she says it, just as we can recognize our friends by their
               attitudes and speech mannerisms.
          l    Write dialogue that “shows” rather than “tells”: Often you must have you seen speaker
               attributions or dialogue tags that end in adverbs.


                 Example: “I want the report by today evening,” the boss said angrily.
               “I’m not ready with the speech,” she said crankily.
               Writers often use this sort of speaker attribution to tell a reader what a character feels
               because telling is always easier than showing. But in reality, showing is a mark of good
               writing, telling is not.

               You  must  eliminate  adverbs  and  show  emotions  instead.  “I  want  the  report  by  today
               evening,” the boss said angrily, can be better written as:
               He slapped his mammoth palm on the table with a force that rattled the papers and said,
               “I want the report by today evening.”
               The last version has a warning tone, and readers will recognize anger in the character’s
               actions, so you don’t have to tell that the boss is angry.

          l    Writing Dialogue that employs variety: Very often you must have noticed in a dialogue:
               he “said” or xyz “said”.  “Said” is often the best choice for dialogue tags because used in
               moderation, readers glide by “said” without noticing it. However, using too many of them
               in succession makes the dialogue monotonous.  Repeated, told, explained, advised, and
               remarked, are all verbs that won’t attract attention. Nevertheless, replacing “said” with
               an assortment of verbs is unnecessary if you write in such a way that readers understand
               which character speaks.





             Notes   Steps to Provide Feedback in a Difficult Conversation
             l   Seek permission to provide the feedback. Even if you are the employee’s boss, start
                 by stating you have some feedback you’d like to share. Ask if it’s a good time or if the
                 employee would prefer to select another time and place. (Within reason, of course.)

             l   Use a soft entry. Don’t dive right into the feedback - give the person a chance to brace
                 for potentially embarrassing feedback. Tell the employee that you need to provide
                 feedback  that  is  difficult  to  share.  If  you’re  uncomfortable  with  your  role  in  the
                 conversation, you might say that, too. Most people are as uncomfortable providing
                 feedback about an individual’s personal dress or habits, as the person receiving the
                 feedback.
                                                                                Contd...



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