Dialogue

“Dialogue” by Marcy Kennedy, published by Tongue Untied Communications on May 21, 2014, is a practical guide designed for writers looking to enhance their dialogue skills. This 126-page book addresses the critical role that strong dialogue plays in storytelling, emphasizing how it can improve pacing, believability, and character development while also highlighting the pitfalls of weak dialogue.
In “Dialogue: A Busy Writer’s Guide,” readers will discover techniques for formatting dialogue clearly and effectively, as well as strategies to avoid common pitfalls such as the As-You-Know-Bob Syndrome. The book covers various challenges writers may face, including the use of dialect and starting chapters with dialogue, providing both theoretical insights and practical examples. With tips and exercises tailored for writers, this edition serves as a valuable resource for those aiming to refine their writing skills in the realm of language arts and disciplines.
Official synopsis Publisher
Every writer knows the benefits strong dialogue can bring to a story-a faster pace, greater believability, increased tension, and even humor.
But not every writer knows how to achieve it.
And, unfortunately, weak dialogue can destroy a story even faster than strong dialogue can improve it. Weak dialogue can drag the pace to a halt, make your characters feel stilted, and confuse your readers.
In other words, to write great fiction, you need to know how to write dialogue that shines.
In Dialogue: A Busy Writer’s Guide, writing instructor and fiction editor Marcy Kennedy shows you how to get it. Inside you’ll learn…
– how to format your dialogue to keep it clear and easy to follow, – tricks to avoid the dreaded As-You-Know-Bob Syndrome, – how to use dialogue to manage your pace, increase tension, and bring your characters to life, – the secrets to dealing with dialogue challenges such as dialect, starting a chapter with dialogue, and using contractions in historical fiction and fantasy, and – much more.
Each book in the Busy Writer’s Guides series is intended to give you enough theory so that you can understand why things work and why they don’t, but also enough examples to see how that theory looks in practice. In addition, they provide tips and exercises to help you take it to the pages of your own story with an editor’s-eye view.
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