SimonDoom
Kink Lord
- Joined
- Apr 9, 2015
- Posts
- 18,970
Here's another one I'm kind of fussy about: overly creative substitutes for "said" and "asked" in dialogue tags. I agree, for the most part, with Elmore Leonard's dictum that you should use just "said" and "asked" almost all the time.
There are a few reasons for this. IMO the dialogue itself--what's between the quote marks--should do the heavy lifting, and the tag is there purely to let you know who is speaking. Too-cute tags can often be redundant if the dialogue itself is handled in the right way. They tell rather than show. A cute dialogue tag is like an overly instrusive movie score that is telling me how to react emotionally to a scene rather than trusting me to respond to the content on the screen.
This isn't a hard and fast rule, but when I notice that an author is actively trying to avoid the use of "said" and "asked" it annoys me.
There are a few reasons for this. IMO the dialogue itself--what's between the quote marks--should do the heavy lifting, and the tag is there purely to let you know who is speaking. Too-cute tags can often be redundant if the dialogue itself is handled in the right way. They tell rather than show. A cute dialogue tag is like an overly instrusive movie score that is telling me how to react emotionally to a scene rather than trusting me to respond to the content on the screen.
This isn't a hard and fast rule, but when I notice that an author is actively trying to avoid the use of "said" and "asked" it annoys me.