I do art...and write? And- yeah I got nothing🖤🩶🤍💜-{ Here, we love sharks }-
188 posts
THE SUN AND THE STAR!??!?!! A SEQUEL!?!!?ARE YALL SEEING THIS SHIT!?!!?!
THE SUN AND THE STAR!??!?!! A SEQUEL!?!!? ARE YALL SEEING THIS SHIT!?!!?!
I’m hyperventilating someone help me
@half-shadowgalra
YOU NEED TO SEE THIS BRO
thalia casting announcement. wottg release. hoh graphic novel and cookbook release. sun and star sequel announced. leah our annabeth chase’s 15th birthday. what a week it is to be a pjo fan!
-
calikitters liked this · 3 months ago
-
123letsgobestie reblogged this · 3 months ago
-
123letsgobestie liked this · 3 months ago
-
mxnicx liked this · 3 months ago
-
dookienessballs liked this · 3 months ago
-
saraflgm liked this · 3 months ago
-
z1886 liked this · 3 months ago
-
justanotherfangirl88 liked this · 3 months ago
-
meowsers7089 liked this · 3 months ago
-
valitie liked this · 3 months ago
-
hahathatsnotright liked this · 3 months ago
-
chloeseriously liked this · 3 months ago
-
abbyf liked this · 3 months ago
-
ilovewatermen liked this · 3 months ago
-
justabooknerdposts liked this · 3 months ago
-
natalimurghulia liked this · 3 months ago
-
garvalhaminho liked this · 3 months ago
-
lavenderblue939 liked this · 3 months ago
-
pjo-tvs-version liked this · 3 months ago
-
half-shadowgalra reblogged this · 3 months ago
-
ghostermctoaster reblogged this · 3 months ago
-
ghostermctoaster liked this · 3 months ago
-
oopsies-i-did-a-thing liked this · 3 months ago
-
perkabeths liked this · 3 months ago
-
howsthatanklehealingup liked this · 3 months ago
-
detectiveoncases liked this · 3 months ago
-
learningtosmelltheroses liked this · 3 months ago
-
qwertyqwerty88 liked this · 3 months ago
-
user-3113s-blog liked this · 3 months ago
-
xixovart liked this · 3 months ago
-
bibibubblegum liked this · 3 months ago
-
hsmtheseries liked this · 3 months ago
-
lovefromnesa liked this · 3 months ago
-
avab00ks9 liked this · 3 months ago
-
insouciantsapphic liked this · 3 months ago
-
percabethschild818 liked this · 3 months ago
-
xofolklore liked this · 3 months ago
More Posts from Ghostermctoaster
going to the GA aquarium >:)
time to drop random moa dialogue 🥰🥰
(I NEED TO SEE SHARKOS)
The urge to bother my mutuals
YALL GUESS WHO JUST WENT FUCKING //FERAL// AS THE AMAZON LADY DROPPED THIS BAD BOY OFF 🤭🤭🤭
How to Write Strong Dialogue
(from a writer of ten years)
So you’re back in the writing trenches. You’re staring at your computer, or your phone, or your tablet, or your journal, and trying not to lose your mind. Because what comes after the first quotation mark? Nothing feels good.
Don’t worry, friend. I’m your friendly tumblr writing guide and I’m here to help you climb out of the pit of writing despair.
I’ve created a character specifically for this exercise. His name is Amos Alejandro III, but for now we’ll just call him Amos. He’s a thirty-something construction worker with a cat who hates him, and he’s just found out he has to go on a quest across the world to save his mother’s diner.
1.) Consider the Attitude and Characteristics of Your Character
One of the biggest struggles writers face when writing dialogue is keeping characters’ dialogue “in-character”.
You’re probably thinking, “but Sparrow, I’m the creator! None of the dialogue I write can be out of character because they’re my original characters!”
WRONG. (I’m hitting the very loud ‘incorrect’ buzzer in your head right now).
Yes, you created your characters. But you created them with specific characteristics and attitudes. For example, Amos lives alone, doesn’t enjoy talking too much, and isn’t a very scholarly person. So he’s probably not going to say something like “I suggest that we pursue the path of least resistance for this upcoming quest.” He’d most likely say, “I mean, I think the easiest route is pretty self-explanatory.”
Another example is a six-year-old girl saying, “Hi, Mr. Ice Cream Man, do you have chocolate sundaes?” instead of “Hewwo, Ice Cweam Man— Chocowate Sundaes?”
Please don’t put ‘w’s in the middle of your dialogue unless you have a very good and very specific reason. I will cry.
Yes, the girl is young, but she’s not going to talk like that. Most children know how to ask questions correctly, and the ‘w’ sound, while sometimes found in a young child’s speech, does not need to be written out. Children are human.
So, consider the attitude, characteristics, and age of your character when writing dialogue!
2.) Break Up Dialogue Length
If I’m reading a novel and I see an entire page of dialogue without any breaks, I’m sobbing. You’re not a 17th century author with endless punctuation. You’re in the 21st century and people don’t read in the same way they used to.
Break up your dialogue. Use long sentences. Use one word. Use commas, use paragraph breaks. Show a character throwing a chair out a window in between sentences.
For example:
“So, you’re telling me the only way to save my Ma’s diner is to travel across five different continents, find the only remaining secret receipt card, and bring it back before she goes out of business? She didn’t have any other copies? Do I have to leave my cat behind?”
vs.
Amos ran a hand over his face. “So, you’re telling me the only way to save my Ma’s diner is to travel across five different continents, find the only remaining secret recipe card, and bring it back before she goes out of business?”
He couldn’t believe his luck. That was sarcastic, of course. This was ironically horrible.
“She didn’t have any other copies?” He leaned forward over the table and frowned. “Do I have to leave my cat behind?”
The second version is easier to digest, and I got to add some fun description of thought and action into the scene! Readers get a taste of Amos’ character in the second scene, whereas in the first scene they only got what felt like a million words of dialogue.
3.) Don’t Overuse Dialogue Tags.
DON’T OVERUSE DIALOGUE TAGS. DON’T. DON’T DON’T DON’T.
If you don’t know what a dialogue tag is, it’s a word after a sentence of dialogue that attributes that dialogue to a specific character.
For example:
“Orange juice and chicken ramen are good,” he said.
‘Said’ functions as the dialogue tag in this sentence.
Dialogue tags are good. You don’t want to completely avoid them. (I used to pride myself on how I could write stories without any dialogue tags. Don’t do that.) Readers need to know who’s speaking. But overusing them, or overusing weird or unique tags, should be avoided.
Examples:
“I’m gonna have to close my diner,” Amos’ mother said.
“Why?” Amos growled. “It’s been in the family forever.”
“I’ve lost the secret recipe card, and I can’t keep the diner open without it!” she cried.
“The Bacon Burger Extreme recipe card?” Amos questioned.
“Yes!” Amos’ mother screamed.
“Well, that’s not good,” Amos complained.
vs.
“I’m gonna have to close my diner,” Amos’ mother said, taking her son’s hand and leading him over to one of the old, grease-stained tabletops with the ripped-fabric booths.
Amos simply stared at her as they moved. “Why? It’s been in the family forever.”
“I’ve—” she looked away for a moment, then took in a breath. “I’ve lost the secret recipe card. And I can’t keep the diner open without it.”
“The Bacon Burger Extreme recipe card?”
“Yes!” She still wouldn’t meet his eyes, and her shoulders were shaking. “Yes.”
Amos sat down heavily in the booth. “Well, that’s not good.”
The first scene only gives character names and dialogue tags. There are no actions and no descriptions. The second scene, however, gives these things. It gives the reader descriptions of the diner, the characters’ actions, and attitudes. Overusing dialogue tags gets boring fast, so add interest into your writing!
So! When you’re writing, consider the attitude of your character, vary dialogue length, and don’t overuse dialogue tags.
Now climb out of the pit of writing despair. Pick up your pen or computer. And write some good dialogue!
Best,
Sparrow