The 7 Tools of Dialogue By James Scott Bell (writersdigest.com)

Similar documents
Hills Like White Elephants

*High Frequency Words also found in Texas Treasures Updated 8/19/11

TEST ONE. Singing Star Showing this week. !The Wild Wheel Ride! Indoor tennis centre. RACING CAR TRACK To drive, children must be 1 metre or more

How to Write Dialogue Well Transcript

Food Idioms WHICH IDIOM BEST DESCRIBES THESE PEOPLE?

-1- It's Up To You: Choose Your Own Adventure

The Arms. Mark Brooks.

Lesson 1 Thinking about subtexts, tone and ambiguity in literary texts

Instant Words Group 1

Chair: This is the English tour of the production, and the actors here didn t perform in Australia.

Look Mom, I Got a Job!

Exemplar for Internal Achievement Standard. Media Studies Level 1

Magical. Happy. music cues Happy productive. You see, in our classroom the Science Guy song had a special message for my students:

65 Mustang. A comedy in one act by Burton Bumgarner

Pedestrian Safer Journey Ages Video Script

ii) Are we writing in French?. iii) Is there a book under the chair? iv) Is the house in front of them?

Study Guide for. (name) (no.) (class)

Too Much Bible Story: Bottom Line: Memory Verse: Life App:

RSS - 1 FLUENCY ACTIVITIES

1) Worksheet 1: Flashcards of the characters and settings of the play

CHRISTMAS COMES to DETROIT LOUIE

March 12, 2017 Philadelphia St. Patrick s Day Parade

Suitable Class Level: Materna 1st - 2nd Elementary

LearnEnglish Elementary Podcast Series 02 Episode 08

Units 1 & 2 Pre-exam Practice

General Revision on Module 1& 1 and (These are This is You are) two red apples in the basket.

Admit One. Mike Shelton

Complete the sentence using words in the box. disappeared, wasted, miserable, appeared, appeared. to begin to be seen

Music Enrichment for Senior Citizens

SUPPLY CHAIN. LOGLINE: A day in the life of an ordinary man who does extraordinary things that changes the lives of many.

Methods for Memorizing lines for Performance

Aloni Gabriel and Butterfly

The Fourth Wall. By Rebekah M. Ball. Performance Rights

Bismarck, North Dakota is known for several things. First of all, you probably already know that Bismarck is the state capitol. You might even know

Section I. Quotations

The Black Book Series: The Lost Art of Magical Charisma (The Unreleased Volume: Beyond The 4 Ingredients)

This is a vocabulary test. Please select the option a, b, c, or d which has the closest meaning to the word in bold.

Producing Commercials, Promos and News

Welcome Home Brew. Tom Levesque

F31 Homework GRAMMAR REFERNCE - UNIT 6 EXERCISES

The Jester. By Sam Arnel

How to solve problems with paradox

BLM 1 Name Date Benchmark Literacy Grade 5 Unit 1/Week Benchmark Education Company, LLC

THE OTHER SIDE OF THE DOOR

A sentence is a group of words that tells a whole idea. Example: The cat sat on the mat.

RHYTHM. Simple Meters; The Beat and Its Division into Two Parts

Infographic: Would You Want a Robot for a Friend? p. 2. Nonfiction: The Snake That s Eating Florida, p. 4

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS THEATRE 101

The Moon Bowl. The Moon Bowl LEVELED READER BOOK SA. Visit for thousands of books and materials.

THE BENCH PRODUCTION HISTORY

21 DAYS OF KINDNESS. inspired by the guys at KindSpring.org

Emerging Cocoon Order the complete book from

KG2 Trimester 1. English Reinforcement Package

Hebrew In Action! Booklet Hey

Do s and Don ts of Dialogue

Hello! & Welcome to A Twisted Plays/Junior Drama Sample Script! On the following pages you will find a sample of the script that is available for

3/4/2016. Please Pass The Peas! by Terri Young/Mathis

Please Pass The Peas! by Terri Young/Mathis

GUS. Written by. Daniel Walker. Second Draft February 22nd, 2018

Three Wishes. Introduction This popular story starter can begin with an old story.

OLD FLAME. Eléonore Guislin

PRODUCTION OF. Ages. Ages Shows. Performance Guide. Series sponsor:

Student Team Literature Standardized Reading Practice Test A Dime a Dozen (Dial Books for Young Readers, 1998) 4. Vertically means

EXERCISE A: Match the idioms in column A with their meanings in column B. 1. keep up with the Joneses a. to spend more money than what you make

Commonly Misspelled Words

Hi Larry, Cheers, Jeff

Snake in the House. by Far From Ordinary

We walked to the field, to throw the ball around. Some kids said, Want to play? We need someone

Grade 8 English Language Arts/Literacy Literary Analysis Task 2017 Released Items

Idioms and Sayings GRAMMAR

Thanksgiving in Therapy

A Magical Vacation? Preparatory Reading TALKING ABOUT TRAVEL, PAST SIMPLE TENSE ADJECTIVES, ASKING FOLLOW-UP QUESTIONS

180 By Mike Shelton Copyright 2008

(Adapted from Hogue, A First steps in academic writing. Addison-Wesley Longman. New york.)

Hi everyone. My name is and I ve come here today to talk to you about being an engineer. So what is an engineer?

ENGLISH THE AMERICAN WAY

Earplugs. and white stripes. I thought they looked funny but mom said they were for the holiday.

Diamond Piano Student Guide

Episode 28: Stand On Your Head. I m Emily P. Freeman and welcome to The Next Right Thing. You re listening to episode 28.

Confrontation between Jackie and Daniel s ex-girlfriend

This. book belongs to: (Very smart!) YEAh! Nosy

Superstar Teacher Resources

The musicians of Bremen

Most Likely To. by Jeff Mcguire Adapted by Eddie James, Tommy Woodard &The Skitiots

Drama Notebook pg. 1

Viking Sagas adapted by Nigel Bryant

THE GOOD FATHER 16-DE06-W35. Logline: A father struggles to rebuild a relationship with his son after the death of his wife.

Psalm 119:57 NIrV. Healing the Blind Man John 9:1-7. Whoa I Have Life Life with Jesus Praise the Lord Everyday

This is an example of an ineffective memoir

1) What is the book title and author of the book you are reading for your reading log? (The author of my book is The title of my

Taking a BYTE out of Internet Crime!

Thursday Workshop Notes 9 th September 2010

A eyes B ears C nose. A did B made C took. A you going to B you re going to C are you going to. A older B oldest C most old. A than B from C as

Heaven Only Knows. By Corey Sprague by Corey Sprague ALL RIGHTS RESERVED Duplication Prohibited

P.S Band Handbook. Name:

Teaching Resources for The Story Smashup Webcast

The following suggestion from that came up in the discussions following:

Week 2 Elementary Large Group Script

Language Grammar Vocabulary

ADAM By Krista Boehnert

Transcription:

The 7 Tools of Dialogue By James Scott Bell (writersdigest.com) My neighbor John loves to work on his hot rod. He s an automotive whiz and tells me he can hear when something is not quite right with the engine. He doesn t hesitate to pop the hood, grab his bag of tools and start to tinker. He ll keep at it until the engine sounds just the way he wants it to. That s not a bad way to think about dialogue. We can usually sense when it needs work. What fiction writers often lack, however, is a defined set of tools they can put to use on problem areas. So here s a set my seven favorite dialogue tools. Stick them in your writer s toolbox for those times you need to pop the hood and tinker with your characters words. #1 LET IT FLOW. When you write the first draft of a scene, let the dialogue flow. Pour it out like cheap champagne. You ll make it sparkle later, but first you must get it down on paper. This technique will allow you to come up with lines you never would have thought of if you tried to get it right the first time. In fact, you can often come up with a dynamic scene by writing the dialogue first. Record what your characters are arguing about, stewing over, revealing. Write it all as fast as you can. As you do, pay no attention to attributions (who said what). Just write the lines. Once you get these on the page, you will have a good idea of what the scene is all about. And it may be something different than you anticipated, which is good. Now you can go back and write the narrative that goes with the scene, and the normal speaker attributions and tags. I have found this technique to be a wonderful cure for writer s fatigue. I do my best writing in the morning, but if I haven t done my quota by the evening (when I m usually tired), I ll just write some dialogue. Fast and furious. It flows and gets me into a scene. With the juices pumping, I find I ll often write more than my quota. And even if I don t use all the dialogue I write, at least I got in some practice. #2 ACT IT OUT. Before going into writing, I spent some time in New York, pounding the pavement as an actor. While there, I took an acting class that included improvisation. Another member of the class was a Pulitzer Prize winning playwright. When I asked him what he was doing there, he said improvisational work was a tremendous exercise for learning to write dialogue. I found this to be true. But you don t have to join a class. You can improvise just as easily by doing a Woody Allen. 1

Remember the courtroom scene in Allen s movie Bananas? Allen is representing himself at the trial. He takes the witness stand and begins to cross-examine by asking a question, running into the witness box to answer, then jumping out again to ask another question. I am suggesting you do the same thing (in the privacy of your own home, of course). Make up a scene between two characters in conflict. Then start an argument. Go back and forth, changing your actual physical location. Allow a slight pause as you switch, giving yourself time to come up with a response in each character s voice. Another twist on this technique: Do a scene between two well-known actors. Use the entire history of movies and television. Pit Lucille Ball against Bela Lugosi, or have Oprah Winfrey argue with Bette Davis. Only you play all the parts. Let yourself go. And if your local community college offers an improvisation course, give it a try. You might just meet a Pulitzer Prize winner. #3 SIDESTEP THE OBVIOUS. One of the most common mistakes aspiring writers make with dialogue is creating a simple back-and-forth exchange. Each line responds directly to the previous line, often repeating a word or phrase (an echo ). It looks something like this: Hello, Mary. Hi, Sylvia. My, that s a wonderful outfit you re wearing. Outfit? You mean this old thing? Old thing! It looks practically new. It s not new, but thank you for saying so. This sort of dialogue is on the nose. There are no surprises, and the reader drifts along with little interest. While some direct response is fine, your dialogue will be stronger if you sidestep the obvious: Hello, Mary. Sylvia. I didn t see you. My, that s a wonderful outfit you re wearing. I need a drink. I don t really know what is going on in this scene (incidentally, I ve written only these four lines of dialogue). But I think you ll agree this exchange is immediately more interesting and suggestive of currents beneath the surface than the first example. I might even find the seeds of an entire story here. You can also sidestep with a question: Hello, Mary. 2

Sylvia. I didn t see you. My, that s a wonderful outfit you re wearing. Where is he, Sylvia? Hmm. Who is he? And why should Sylvia know? The point is there are innumerable directions in which the sidestep technique can go. Experiment to find a path that works best for you. Look at a section of your dialogue and change some direct responses into off-center retorts. Like the old magic trick ads used to say, You ll be pleased and amazed. #4 CULTIVATE SILENCE. A powerful variation on the sidestep is silence. It is often the best choice, no matter what words you might come up with. Hemingway was a master at this. Consider this excerpt from his short story Hills Like White Elephants. A man and a woman are having a drink at a train station in Spain. The man speaks: Should we have another drink? All right. The warm wind blew the bead curtain against the table. The beer s nice and cool, the man said. It s lovely, the girl said. It s really an awfully simple operation, Jig, the man said. It s not really an operation at all. The girl looked at the ground the table legs rested on. I know you wouldn t mind it, Jig. It s really not anything. It s just to let the air in. The girl did not say anything. In this story, the man is trying to convince the girl to have an abortion (a word that does not appear anywhere in the text). Her silence is reaction enough. By using a combination of sidestep, silence and action, Hemingway gets the point across through a brief, compelling exchange. He uses the same technique in this well-known scene between mother and son in the story Soldier s Home : God has some work for every one to do, his mother said. There can t be no idle hands in His Kingdom. I m not in His Kingdom, Krebs said. We are all of us in His Kingdom. Krebs felt embarrassed and resentful as always. I ve worried about you so much, Harold, his mother went on. I know the temptations you must have been exposed to. I know how weak men are. I know what your own dear grandfather, my own father, told us about the Civil War and I have prayed for you. I pray for you all day long, Harold. Krebs looked at the bacon fat hardening on the plate. 3

Silence and bacon fat hardening. We don t need anything else to catch the mood of the scene. What are your characters feeling while exchanging dialogue? Try expressing it with the sound of silence. #5 POLISH A GEM. We ve all had those moments when we wake up and have the perfect response for a conversation that took place the night before. Wouldn t we all like to have those bon mots at a moment s notice? Your characters can. That s part of the fun of being a fiction writer. I have a somewhat arbitrary rule one gem per quarter. Divide your novel into fourths. When you polish your dialogue, find those opportunities in each quarter to polish a gem. And how do you do that? Like a diamond cutter, you take what is rough and tap at it until it is perfect. In the movie The Godfather, Moe Greene is angry that a young Michael Corleone is telling him what to do. He might have said, I made my bones when you were in high school! Instead, screenwriter Mario Puzo penned, I made my bones when you were going out with cheerleaders! (In his novel, Puzo wrote something a little racier). The point is you can take almost any line and find a more sparkling alternative. Just remember to use these gems sparingly. The perfect comeback grows tiresome if it happens all the time. #6 EMPLOY CONFRONTATION. Many writers struggle with exposition in their novels. Often they heap it on in large chunks of straight narrative. Backstory what happens before the novel opens is especially troublesome. How can we give the essentials and avoid a mere information drop? Use dialogue. First, create a tension-filled scene, usually between two characters. Get them arguing, confronting each other. Then have the information appear in the natural course of things. Here is the clunky way to do it: John Davenport was a doctor fleeing from a terrible past. He had been drummed out of the profession for bungling an operation while he was drunk. Instead, place this backstory in a scene in which John is confronted by a patient who is aware of the doctor s past: I know who you are, Charles said. You know nothing, John said. You re that doctor. If you don t mind I From Hopkins. You killed a woman because you were soused. Yeah, that s it. 4

And so forth. This is a much underused method, but it not only gives weight to your dialogue, it increases the pace of your story. [Here's how to turn traumatic experiences into fuel for your writing.] #7 DROP WORDS. This is a favorite technique of dialogue master Elmore Leonard. By excising a single word here and there, he creates a feeling of verisimilitude in his dialogue. It sounds like real speech, though it is really nothing of the sort. All of Leonard s dialogue contributes to characterization and story. Here is a standard exchange: Your dog was killed? Yes, run over by a car. What did you call it? It was a she. I called her Tuffy. This is the way Leonard did it in Out of Sight: Your dog was killed? Got run over by a car. What did you call it? Was a she, name Tuffy. It sounds so natural, yet is lean and meaningful. Notice it s all a matter of a few words dropped, leaving the feeling of real speech. As with any technique, there s always a danger of overdoing it. Pick your spots and your characters with careful precision and focus, and your dialogue will thank you for it later. Using tools is fun when you know what to do with them. I guess that s why John, my neighbor, is always whistling when he works on his car. You ll see results in your fiction and have fun, too by using these tools to make your dialogue sound just right. Start tinkering. 5

6

7

8

9