On December 2nd April posted this comment: What’s your opinion on placing an emphasis on dialect? For example, Mark Twain’s The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.
What about the words accompanying dialogue? Some people are sticklers for only using “said,” even with questions (instead of “asked”). Others use quite a variety of words to give more… shall we say, “expression” to the dialogue. And I know some don’t care either way, so long as the word isn’t an adverb/ends in “ly.” What say you?
I love Twain, and I adore The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. But Twain, even though his voice is often modern, wrote in a different era. Different conventions applied. I don’t know if anyone today would name a character after a berry, either. Maybe, but the writer would have to have an important reason for doing so.
A writer would also have to have a powerful reason for using dialect, more powerful than simply establishing a regional feeling. Even if you get the dialect exactly right, which is hard, readers are likely to think you didn’t. Speech rings differently for each of us.
You can describe a dialect in narration, and then the reader will know it’s there. If I were introducing a certain species of New York accent (I’m a New Yorker), I might talk about the tortured r and the distorted long i and the attachment of a final g to the next word when that word starts with a vowel, as in Long Gisland. I might even give a sample as I just did and then return to standard English.
Choice of expression also can portray a region. You all is southern and only southern in my experience. Maybe these aren’t New York-isms, but it seems to me I hear Right? and Am I crazy? a lot here. My late friend from Minnesota used to say oofta! frequently. Pay attention to local phrases and use them, but don’t overdo or you’ll shift into parody – unless you have parody in mind.
There are more tools to situate our characters, because locales often live up to type. My books have taken me all over the country. On the streets of San Francisco and nowhere else I have overheard conversations about spirit channeling and fruit fasting. If I’m traveling for a publisher, I’m assigned local media escorts, who take me to schools and bookstores. In LA my escort one time was a starlet, and a car service driver had written a screenplay. When I sign books in southern states the children seem to have three-syllable and hyphenated first names more often than anywhere else. You can use details like these to establish place.
But again, be careful and specific, and use a light touch. We don’t want to alienate readers who actually come from these places. It’s fun – and safe – to adapt these techniques to fantasy, to invent regional characteristics for a fictional world. Make up your own, though. Don’t have your Quachappians saying oofta!
I talk about said and other speech verbs in Writing Magic. I like said because it fades into the background, as does asked. I’m not sure I approve of myself for this, but I use cried a lot. Cried suggests emotional intensity better than yelled, which, to me, is just about volume. I’m fine with speech verbs that convey information, like yelled, shouted, whispered, because I can’t tell a character is doing any of those things unless I’m told. Whispered can be used in a scene where quiet is called for. The word needn’t be repeated, because the reader will assume from then on that everybody is whispering unless told otherwise.
I’m opposed to questioned, exclaimed, snarled, blubbered – because they draw attention to themselves and away from the actual speech. I use blurted sometimes, so I guess I don’t mind it, although if you can convey blurting without actually writing the word, so much the better. I just looked at my latest manuscript and found continued, burst out, called, even squeaked, which I think is okay because the character’s throat was closing on her.
My favorite writing teacher insisted that speech verbs have to involve speech, so it’s wrong to write, She laughed, “That’s funny.” because you can’t laugh words. It should be, She laughed. “That’s funny.” or some other way of putting it. Notice the period rather than the comma after laughed.
About adverbs describing speech, like “That’s awful,” he said emphatically. – I’m sure I’m sometimes guilty of them, and sometimes you need them, but as infrequently as possible.
It’s great not to need speech verbs at all. One way to eliminate them is to break speech up with action like this: “I’m scared.” Sally twisted the ends of her scarf. “Did we step into a horror movie?”
We know Sally is the one talking if she has the paragraph to herself, which is a good way to avoid confusion. Action also lets the reader see what’s going on. It can shed light on a character, too, or heighten tension.
Here’s a prompt: A deli sandwich maker, a retired dress saleswoman, a stay-at-home dad, a college student, a lawyer, and a physical therapist are on a train that gets delayed. One of these characters (or any others you choose) starts a conversation, and the rest join in. Some may speak on cell phones as well. Write down what they say. You may want to try the conversation/debate/argument, whatever it turns into, a few different ways, experimenting with speech verbs, action, and placing the characters regionally. Have fun, and save all the versions.
april says:
Thank you for answering my questions. This was an interesting read!
Sarah says:
I loved this post!
I remember once writing about a conversation I had with a friend who is from an Eastern European country.
Trying to write her accent would have been horrible, but I was able to- at times- mimic the cadence of her speech. Sometimes it meant making the sentence structure a little simpler or changing the use of articles. The trick was keeping it subtle enough to suggest what she would sound like and not write a direct transcription.
In most places, I think it worked.I wish, though, that I'd had something like this when I was writing that piece.
Erin Edwards says:
Great tips on dialect! I've found it's really tricky, even when writing the dialect I grew up with. I'll keep this post handy next time I try my hand at it.
Jaime says:
Reading your blogs help me with my own writing. I really appreciate all the help you give me, however inadvertently.
Amy Goodwin says:
Thank you so much for this! Ever since I first got onto your blog through your Pep talk for NaNoWriMo I've just been getting more excited about what you write on here. (By the way, thank you for that Pep Talk! It was wonderfully encouraging and made my mom and me laugh very hard!)
I've been thinking about the best way to do dialogue for a long time and this helped shed a lot of light on it! And your writing prompt was great! I got a whole story from the portion of dialogue I got through that prompt.
Kim says:
This is such a great post! Thank you for your insight.
The Scribbler says:
I was so delighted to discover your blog! I adore all your books, particularly 'Writing Magic'. I'm excited to read your past and future posts as a bit of an extension to that book!
The Scribbler says:
Also, I noticed that there seems to be a lot of adults commenting here. I'm a teen; is that uncommon for this blog?
gailcarsonlevine says:
Scribbler–I'm hoping the blog is useful to writers with a big range of experience. I don't know how old people are unless they say. Welcome!
Gabriela Lucia says:
haha, I use "said" a lot, but not on purpose, of course.
Anyway, this probably could be considered a vague question, but how do you connect with your character?
I've mapped out an entire trilogy, even some of the dialogue and the theme, but I STILL can't seem to feel like my character. Whenever I write it feels flat and unlike the way I want my character to be. I feel like I don't deserve to be the one to write a book about her. Can you help possibly?