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Three Tips for Writing Strong Action Beats

Dialogue Tags | Three Tips for Writing Strong Action Beats

Last week, I discussed why “said” is the most effective speaker attribution. No, I’m not a fan of creative dialogue tags (she apologised unrepentantly).

But using “said” all the time can get boring and repetitive, and we don’t want our fiction to be boring or repetitive. What can we do?

Fortunately, there are several alternatives to said. These include:

  • Action beats
  • Dialogue cues
  • Interior monologue

Today I’m going to discuss action beats, and suggest three tips for writing strong action beats.

Action Beats

Action beats are used in fiction to break up the dialogue and Browne and King define action beats as:

The bits of action interspersed throughout a scene, such as a character walking to a window … Usually they involve physical gestures.

The advantage of using an action beat over a speaker attribution is that the action beat serves multiple purposes:

  • It breaks up the dialogue.
  • It tells the reader who is speaking.
  • It shows the reader something about the scene.
  • It provides a sense of progression and movement.
  • It also gets away from the perceived problem of overusing the boring “said”.

An action beat is visible, so it can be an action performed by the point of view character (when the point of view character is the speaker), or observed by the point of view character (when the point of view character isn’t the speaker).

There are three common problems with using action beats as dialogue tags:

  • Combining speaker attributions and action beats.
  • Using boring action beats.
  • Using too many action beats.

Combining Speaker Attributions and Action Beats

There is no need for a speaker attribution if you’re also using an action beat, because the action beat fulfils the role of the speaker attribution. For example:

“I’m sorry,” Jane said, and looked at the floor.

Becomes:

“I’m sorry.” Jane looked at the floor.

Cutting the speaker attribution will tighten the writing and improve the pace.

Using Boring Action Beats

An action beat is your opportunity to show what is happening. But many authors use the same action beats over and over, to the point when they become boring. For example:

  • Jack blinked.
  • Jack nodded.
  • Jack shrugged.
  • Jack smiled.

It’s not that there is anything wrong with any of these beats. The issue is they tend to be overused—one original smile shows something about the character. One hundred smiles shows nothing. The trick is to take the plain “she smiled” and expand it to a more powerful smile, one that shows the reader more about the character.

There was nothing happy about Jack’s smile. It was more Hannibal Lecter meets The Joker.

Or:

Jack smiled a slow smile, a smile that said he had all the time in the world and nowhere else he’d rather be.

The right smile (or nod or shrug or blink) will obviously depend on your character and the specific scene. Play around with your actions, and see how you can strengthen your action beats. If you can’t strengthen them, can you use a speaker attribution, a line of interior monologue, or a dialogue cue instead?

Sometimes authors take these boring but functional action beats and turn them into telling:

  • Jack blinked in confusion.
  • Jack nodded in agreement.
  • Jack shrugged indecisively.

Why are these telling? Because they are not visual, or because they are predictable. What does a confused blink look like? When do we nod except in agreement? Again, use your imagination to see how you can strengthen your action beats and use them to deepen character and move the plot forward.

Jack blinked long and slow, so long and slow she could have fallen asleep between one blink and the next.

Or:

Jack blinked twice and his left eye crinkled at the corner. Jane was sure he had no idea what she was talking about. Typical.

Or perhaps Jack doesn’t blink at all (and perhaps he’s not confused):

Jack looked left, right, up, down. Anywhere but at her. Either he had no idea what she was talking about, or he was trying to dream up a convincing lie. He looked up and left again, his usual tell when he was trying to come up with a creative yet convincing response. That look said he was guilty. Big surprise. Not.

Boring action beats make excellent placeholders in you first draft, because they don’t require any thought. But ensure that you revise the boring beats into something fresh when you edit. Use action beats, interior monologue, or dialogue cues to better show the action and emotion.

Even better, use body language to show the emotion—what’s going on behind the scene. The following resources will help you come up with fresh action beats to better show emotion:

Using Too Many Action Beats

Some authors pepper their dialogue with action beats, to the point where the dialogue becomes a ping-pong match. Remember, the purpose of the action beat is to identify who is speaking and make the scene visible.

For example:

“Hi.” Jake lifted a hand in greeting. “How are you?” He put his hand in his pocket. “I haven’t seen you around for a while.” He looked away, unable to meet my eyes. Was he embarrassed?

For example:

“Hi.” Jake lifted a hand in greeting. “How are you?” He put his hand in his pocket. “I haven’t seen you around for a while.” He looked away, unable to meet my eyes. Was he embarrassed?

Instead, pare back the action beats to focus on what’s important:

“Hi, Jane. How are you?” Jake looked past me, unable to meet my eyes. “I haven’t seen you around in a while.”

As James Scott Bell points out:

Too many action tags will wear the reader out. Variety is called for, and often the best choice is no tag at all.

So ensure your action beats add to the scene, rather than taking away from it.

 

I’ll be back next week to discuss two more alternatives to “said”—interior monologue, and dialogue cues.

 

5 Tips for Writing Realistic Dialogue in Fiction

#WriteTips | 5 Tips for Writing Realistic Dialogue in Fiction

Dialogue is one of the most important aspects of a novel. Great dialogue enhances characterisation, and moves the plot forward. But stilted or unrealistic dialogue makes a novel difficult to read, and can encourage the reader to abandon the novel (#TrueStory).

Dialogue needs to read like words real people will say, but it also needs to read smoothly and have meaning. This means eliminating some of the ums and ahs and repetition we have in real-life dialogue. But it doesn’t mean replacing them with long, grammatically perfect sentences that no one would ever say in real life.

Here are some tips for writing great dialogue:

Dialogue should sound natural.

It’s not natural—because it doesn’t have all those ums and ahs and interjections and interruptions and subject changes that are features of a real conversation. But it needs to sound natural.

That means:

  • Short sentences.
  • Simple sentences.
  • Sentence fragments.
  • Avoid adjectives (because we don’t usually use adjectives in our everyday conversation).
  • Use adverbs (use them sparingly, but you can use them. After all, most people do use adverbs when they talk, which is probably why so many slip into our writing).

A simple sentence is subject – verb – object:

“I love you.”

When we talk in real life, we’re more likely to use a succession of short sentences than a longer, complex sentence. Which of these sounds more like how real people talk?

I love dogs, because they’re always so affectionate.
I love dogs. They’re so affectionate.

Both paragraphs are grammatically correct, but the second sounds more like real-life dialogue.

In contrast, interior monologue can be full of complex sentences, because that’s more like how we think:

I love dogs, the way they’re so affectionate. Not like cats. Cats can be cuddly and all, but it’s all on their terms. They can be affectionate, but they can also be really standoffish.

Writing overly formal dialogue can lead to writing sentences that no one would say in real life, or that are impossible to read aloud (punctuation is your friend, people). Some authors find that dictating their manuscript helps ensure their dialogue reads and sounds like a real conversation.

Use Realistic Vocabulary

The vocabulary in dialogue should fit the specific character:

  • Age
  • Education level
  • Culture
  • Where they live

An adult is going to use more complex vocabulary than a child (unless the child is particularly precocious). A university professor is going to use more complex vocabulary than a manual worker (unless that manual worker is working to support their PhD studies).

Use Contractions

Most of us use contractions when we speak, so it feels unnatural to read dialogue that does not use contractions. But there are exceptions:

  • If the novel is historical fiction (i.e. before Tudor times).
  • If the character speaks English as a second language.
  • If the character is speaking another language.
  • If the scene calls for formal language e.g. a police officer giving evidence in court.

Avoid Dialect Spellings

Some authors use nonstandard spelling to indicate the character’s accent. I find this distracting. Sometimes it’s distracting because I can’t work out the word, so I have to stop and sound it out to understand the passage. And sometimes it’s distracting because the nonstandard spelling is how I pronounce the word, so I’m left wondering how the author pronounces the word.

Here’s an example, from Trainspotting by Irvine Welsh:

Ah tried tae keep ma attention oan the Jean-Claude Van Damme video. As happens in such moveis, they started oaf wi an obligatory dramatic opening. Then the next phrase ay the picture involved building up the tension through introducing the dastardly villain and sticking the weak plot togither. Any minute now though, auld Jean-Claude’s ready to git doon tae some serious swedgin.

I am obviously not the target reader for Trainspotting, because I find this virtually unreadable (and inconsistent: Walsh has only used dialect for common words:

  • ah for I
  • tae for to
  • ma for my
  • oaf for off
  • wi for with
  • ay for of

The less common words are spelled correctly—introducing the darstadly villain. Surely someone who says ma for my and wi for with would say intraducin, not introducing? As such, the spelling feels inconsistent.

I therefore recommend the following:

  • If the word is English, use the dictionary spelling.
  • If the word isn’t English, use the relevant dictionary spelling.
  • Use slang where appropriate.
  • Use regional vocabulary where
  • Use word order to indicate accent or nonstandard usage

Ensure Dialogue Doesn’t Tell

One of the major “rules” of modern fiction is to show, not tell. Dialogue should be showing, but sometimes dialogue slips into telling e.g., when the characters are telling each other things they already know, or when dialogue is used to share backstory.

 

So those are my five tips for writing realistic dialogue in fiction. I’ll be back next week to discuss one area where telling often slips in—in dialogue tags.