Lately I’ve read several stories
by authors don’t know how to handle dialogue. Either I can’t figure out who is
speaking, or the dialogue attributions sound contrived. So this week I am
reprinting an article I wrote for the Indiana Writers’ Consortium and published
on it’s blog on June 8, 2016. I have made a few minor modifications to the original
post.
Who Said That?
Dialogue can be tricky.
First, there is the problem of how much or how little to use, which may depend
on genre. An action novel usually has less dialogue than a love story. But in neither
case should the conversation be true-to-life. The reader doesn’t want to hear
the small talk that occurs around the breakfast table—unless it reveals the
protagonist’s anxiety or has some other link to the story. The same is true for
the uhs and ahs of normal conversation—leave them out unless they show the
speaker’s hesitancy to answer a key question.
But this blog post isn’t
about those issues. Instead, it will concentrate on the question that troubles
most writers much of the time: How do I make sure my readers know who is
talking without interrupting the story’s flow?
Most writers default to
using dialogue tags. Some writers are horrified at the very idea. Oh no, never!
In their view, dialogue tags were created by the devil. But if you read their
own works, you’ll be surprised at the number of dialogue tags that creep in.
Still, since dialogue tags should be the last resort, I’ll address them at the
end.
Action
Action can be a good way
to show who is speaking, although that should never be its sole purpose. When
used correctly, action has the added benefit of providing information about the
speaker or the setting. Consider these two examples:
Bob
slammed his fist on the table. “He’s a liar.” (Showing that Bob is angry as
well as attributing the statement to him.)
“I can’t
lend you any money.” Mavis flung her mink stole across a Chippendale chair,
barely missing the Ming vase on the stand next to it. “I’ll be going to the
poor house soon, myself.” (Showing that Mavis lives a life contrary to her
words.)—Okay, that one is probably over the top, but you get the picture.
The action must fit,
however. Characters can only drink so many cups of coffee during a five-minute
conversation, and even one may be too many. I’m guilty of this, but at least I
know it. Some writers seem to think that any action is fine as long as the
speaker is doing it. For example:
Tom
buttered his toast. “I got fired from my job yesterday.”
If the only reason for
inserting an action is to identify the speaker, it will sound contrived. Find
another way to show who is speaking.
Using Names
The use of names in
dialogue can identify the speaker by process of elimination. If John and Mary
meet on the street, which character is talking here?
“How did
the meeting go, John?”
Obviously, Mary must be
speaking. But this technique can be misused, too. In real life, we seldom say
another person’s name when talking directly to them. Once she had John’s
attention, Mary would simply ask, “How did the meeting go?” So don’t use the
name of the person being addressed unless it sounds natural.
Two-People
Conversations
If you have only two
people in a conversation, you may not need attributions once you have
identified the first speaker. Consider this:
Mary
took Dan’s coat and hung it in the closet. “How was your day?”
“Boring,
as usual. I wish I could quit, but we need the money.”
“Well,
dinner should cheer you up. I made your favorite meal.”
“Spaghetti?”
“Yes.”
This conversation is as
boring as Dan’s job, but at least the reader can follow it. If it went on for
any longer, however, we would need an occasional attribution to remind readers
who is speaking. Action works well for attribution here because it also adds
more life to the scene. (In this particular example, you might also want to ask
whether you need the conversation at all, but it gets my point across.)
Unique Voices
Sometimes you can tell
who is speaking just by how they speak or what they say. Teenagers talk
differently than their parents, so in a three-way conversation you may only need
to include attributions for the parents. Or if Karl has recently emigrated from
Germany, we know that he is the one talking when we hear this:
“I can
the question not answer.”
No attribution is
necessary.
Dialogue Tags
Although writers should
avoid dialogue tags when we can, sometimes we do need them. Even so, they
shouldn’t be too obvious. “Karen articulated,” “David exclaimed,” and “she
cautioned” all make the reader stumble over the story. With rare exceptions,
stick to “said” and “asked,” which tend to disappear on the page.
The rare exception I
recognize is where a particular dialogue tag is the most effective way of
conveying a message, such as using “she whispered” to show that the character
doesn’t want to be heard. Even so, it is better to have your character simply gasp
than to have her gasp out her words. And if your character is lying, let the
reader figure it out from the context rather than using “she lied” as a
dialogue tag.
Experiment with different
ways to attribute dialogue to your characters. But if nothing else feels
natural, there is nothing wrong with “said” and “asked.” Even the best writers
use those words at times.
Just count them up.
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