
Learning to write effective, believable dialogue is one of the toughest parts of learning to write narrative — whether fiction or memoir. We don’t want to simply transcribe the way people actually talk, with all the pointless “ums” and stammery filler-things we say in real life. But we also don’t want to write as if all our characters are English professors, speaking in complete sentences composed with perfect grammar.
What we’re looking for is believable dialogue not realistic dialogue. In fiction, we’re usually aiming for believability, not realism.
And dialogue tags! Dialogue tags are probably the biggest problem in newbie writing. Is “said” really invisible?” We want to show a little creativity, but avoid the “Tom Swifty” trap
Here are nine of the most common dialogue problems a new writer has to deal with — with some suggestions on how to fix them.
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