On dialogue
Quick tips for new authors

  • Never, ever explain your dialogue. If it doesn’t convey what you want, rewrite it. 
  • Paragraph whenever a character starts speaking unless just a very few words precede the dialogue (He looked up.) Don’t bury your excellent dialogue—set it off. Paragraphing for dialogue also makes a dialogue […]
By |2023-10-30T20:25:41+00:00October 30th, 2023||Comments Off on On dialogue
Quick tips for new authors

On engaging readers’ imaginations
And the value of never explaining emotions

People love to pick up on the codes from the signals we all put out, and in fiction it’s one of your strongest forms of reader participation. So the less you explain things to your readers, especially characters’ emotions, the more intense their involvement. There will be times when an explanation will be unavoidable or […]

By |2023-10-30T20:24:39+00:00October 30th, 2023||Comments Off on On engaging readers’ imaginations
And the value of never explaining emotions

On the importance of dazzling dialogue
And a tip on how to write it

You probably have a pretty good idea of what mastering dialogue could do for your writing. If you write short stories or novels, you want your characters to captivate and convince the reader. Those characters come to life—or fail to—when they speak. 

Crisp, revealing dialogue that fits naturally into the mouth of its speaker […]

By |2023-10-30T20:24:03+00:00October 30th, 2023||Comments Off on On the importance of dazzling dialogue
And a tip on how to write it

On pace of character development
A quick reflection on the value of avoiding too much too soon

The process of creating interesting and memorable characters whose fate readers can develop a stake in is just that: a process, not an event. You want readers to get to know your characters the way they get to know people in real life—a little at a time. So in the first five pages, writers should […]

By |2023-10-30T20:23:18+00:00October 30th, 2023||Comments Off on On pace of character development
A quick reflection on the value of avoiding too much too soon

On a common misstep in a novel’s first chapter
A tip for novelists on what to avoid

The most common mistake we find writers making, albeit with the best of intentions, is to open their novels with some kind of information—exposition—rather than with a scene, something that happens. (Or by pulling the reader’s attention from an opening scene to explain it in some fashion.)

This is often deliberate, the idea […]

By |2023-10-30T20:22:12+00:00October 30th, 2023||Comments Off on On a common misstep in a novel’s first chapter
A tip for novelists on what to avoid

On faith in a coming of age novel
To an author struggling to make her character’s faith a driving force of a compelling plot

The motor for this novel is Gina’s desire for God, yearning for intimacy with God,  and longing for a sign.  Yet this wonderfully forthright, up-front, articulate character who in her first breath as a character is praying doesn’t seem to have any clear notion of what kind of sign from God […]

By |2023-10-30T20:21:12+00:00October 30th, 2023||Comments Off on On faith in a coming of age novel
To an author struggling to make her character’s faith a driving force of a compelling plot
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