KillerMuffin
Seraphically Disinclined
- Joined
- Jul 29, 2000
- Posts
- 25,603
Okay, here's another one of Muff's bright ideas to make this forum more enticing and maybe have it move more. Let's see if it appeals better than the last idiotic notion from yours truly.
The point of this exercise is to bring a portion of writing relevant to stuff posted at Lit up for discussion. I will ask leading questions, but you are not limited to answering them. You can discuss however you choose. I thought about it, but I won't being using stories in these posts as examples. You can, however. Examples are always good. If you use a story, please post the excerpt clearly and a link back to the original.
The first discussion: Dialogue
After a thorough lot of "reading" in the lists for the past month or so, maybe longer (it all runs together), I've concluded that half the stories use dialogue to further the story. The other half either don't use it, or don't use it to develop anything.
So let's give it a look.
What is dialogue?
How can dialogue be used to develop character?
How can dialogue be used to develop plot?
How do you use attributives to their best advantage (attributives are the words that tag the speech, "said" words)?
How do you use dialogue combined with action?
How do you use dialogue combined with description?
What do you consider "good" use of dialogue? "Bad" use?
Attributives.
What's your take on these?
How do you get around using them?
Answer what you wish, discuss away!
The point of this exercise is to bring a portion of writing relevant to stuff posted at Lit up for discussion. I will ask leading questions, but you are not limited to answering them. You can discuss however you choose. I thought about it, but I won't being using stories in these posts as examples. You can, however. Examples are always good. If you use a story, please post the excerpt clearly and a link back to the original.
The first discussion: Dialogue
After a thorough lot of "reading" in the lists for the past month or so, maybe longer (it all runs together), I've concluded that half the stories use dialogue to further the story. The other half either don't use it, or don't use it to develop anything.
So let's give it a look.
What is dialogue?
How can dialogue be used to develop character?
How can dialogue be used to develop plot?
How do you use attributives to their best advantage (attributives are the words that tag the speech, "said" words)?
How do you use dialogue combined with action?
How do you use dialogue combined with description?
What do you consider "good" use of dialogue? "Bad" use?
Attributives.
What's your take on these?
How do you get around using them?
Answer what you wish, discuss away!