Everyone, it seems, wants fame. We want success. And success, in writing, is measured by readership. It's measured by exposure to the greater public. It's measured in the connections we have to other writers and also to our publishers. Yet the root of these connections is the work itself - the writing.
Showing posts with label adverbs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label adverbs. Show all posts
Friday, April 23, 2010
Monday, April 19, 2010
Writing Your Way to the Long Story
Writing the ten page Whole Story is, in a way, the culmination of the Introduction to Fiction and Poetry course I teach here at Hopkins. At ten pages, we begin to cross the threshold from college essay into plot development, from simply writing a scene or revealing a character to developing the forward motion of the story. To read about how you can write a ten page story (or start any longer work of fiction), take a look at my Writing the Whole Story article on the IFP Blog.
Tuesday, March 9, 2010
Dialogue Tags
"You're really want to read this Amazing Post About Dialogue Tags," he said. "It is thoroughly entertaining."
"You said the same thing about paragliding into a swamp bog," she replied. "Why should I listen to you?"
"Because I speak so prettily," he laughed lovingly, with the tone of one walking on air.
Read more about Dialogue Tags for Squirt Guns
"You said the same thing about paragliding into a swamp bog," she replied. "Why should I listen to you?"
"Because I speak so prettily," he laughed lovingly, with the tone of one walking on air.
Read more about Dialogue Tags for Squirt Guns
Labels:
action,
adverbs,
dialogue,
dialogue tags,
fiction,
hyperbole,
pestilence,
plague,
prepositions,
speech attribution,
zombies
Dialogue Tags for Squirt Guns
It's the sharp voice at the start of the chapter. It's the old man saying to go west, young man - west. It's the young woman telling off that scumbag loser who wants to go on a date. Yes: it's dialogue.
But dialogue can't stand alone. It requires attribution, so we know who's speaking. And this is where dialogue tags come in: the "he said/she said" of your story. Here are some quick tips you need to follow in order to avoid voices that sharply cut with the jagged feel of rusty nails, old men who snort out directions, and young women who shriek out rebuttals...
Labels:
action,
adverbs,
dialogue,
dialogue tags,
fiction,
hyperbole,
pestilence,
plague,
prepositions,
speech attribution,
zombies
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