ResourcesMEDIAWriting Techniques | Tips on Writing Dialogue from Famous Authors

Writing Techniques | Tips on Writing Dialogue from Famous Authors

1. Dialogue should be brief.
2. It should add to the reader’s present knowledge.
3. It should eliminate the routine exchanges of ordinary conversation.
4. It should convey a sense of spontaneity but eliminate the repetitiveness of real talk.
5. It should keep the story moving forward.
6. It should be revelatory of the speaker’s character, both directly and indirectly.
7. It should show the relationships among people.
— Elizabeth Bowen

Dialogue has to show not only something about the speaker that is its own revelation but also maybe something about the speaker that he doesn’t know but the other character does know.
— Eudora Welty

Dialogue in fiction should be reserved for the culminating moments and regarded as the spray into which the great wave of narrative breaks in curving toward the watcher on the shore.
— Edith Wharton

Good writers do not litter their sentences with adverbial garbage. They do not hold up signs reading “laughter!” or “applause!” The content of dialogue ought to suggest the mood.
— James J. Kilpatrick

Nouns, verbs, are the workhorses of language. Especially in dialogue, don’t say, “she said mincingly,” or “he said boisterously.” Just say, “he said, she said.”
— John P. Marquand

The dialogue which does not move the story along, or add to the mood of the story, or have an easily definable reason for being there at all (such as to establish important characterization), should be considered superfluous and therefore cut.
— Bill Pronzini

To write successful dialogue the author must have access to the mind of all his characters, but the reader must not perceive any more than he would in real life.
— William Sloane

Don’t write stage directions. If it is not apparent what the character is trying to accomplish by saying the line, telling us how the character said it, or whether or not she moved to the couch isn’t going to aid the case. We might understand better what the character means, but we aren’t particularly going to care.
— David Mamet

Remember that you should be able to identify each character by what he or she says. Each one must sound different from the others. And they should not all sound like you.
— Anne Lamott

Which one is your favorite? Do you have other tips to add?

Cook Cockhttps://www.dreame.com/
Obsessed with books, Cook has been a pro writer for more than 15 years. Previously, Cook served as initial reporter contact in news report formulation for Omaha World Herald before shifting to book writing. His writing has been featured on Inc, Lifehacker, and Wired before. In early 2009, he joined Stary as Editorial Director, where she could not only engage his interest in novel writing, but also oversee content strategy and operations. And then, he became editor-in-chief of the Stary writing manangement team in 2012. He graduated from the University of Miam with a B.A. in English writing.
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