More on Writing Dialogue - Creative Writing Techniques
More on Writing DialogueThis is Part 2 of the CWN series on writing dialogue. (Click here for Part 1). For creative writing help and the chance to take a free fiction writing course, browse the links at the bottom of this page.How to Write Dialogue - Part 2 Do you hear voices in your head? If so, I'd recommend against mentioning that at a job interview or on a first date. If not, read How to Write Dialogue That Works and work on developing a sense of your characters' voices and what they should say in your story. After that, it's a matter of putting it down on the page. How do you show who's saying what? Often, fiction writers start a new paragraph each time the speaker changes. You can also include dialogue tags such as "he said," "she murmured," "I asked." But you can skip the dialogue tags when it's obvious who's talking without them. Take some fiction books off your shelf and looking at the dialogue format. There are no unbreakable rules for writing dialogue (it's called "creative writing" for a reason), but there are some common practices, and I'd suggest following them unless you have a good reason not to. Why distract your readers unnecessarily? Dos and don'ts for writing dialogue Dos:
Don'ts:
Writing dialogue - next steps Choose one of the links below for more on how to write fiction. Try some exercises to practice dialogue-writing. Review Part 1 on the series of How to Write Dialogue. Find out about the CWN Free Online Writing Courses. See a menu of CWN pages on How to Write a Story.
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