I'm a writer of erotic fiction, mostly of a paranormal/fantasy bent. Welcome to my Blog! Adults only please ... you know the drill. All commenters welcome. All text copyright Janine Ashbless unless otherwise stated.
Wednesday, 13 July 2011
Dialogue
This was the very first bit I saw of the modern re-boot of Sherlock and I knew right then that I loved it, I loved it forever.
Oh how I want to write like Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss...
Dialogue - it's a bugger to write. I always struggle with it, but it's vitally important for a story. Yes, in erotica too! Especially for me, because I'm not the sort who does page-long descriptions of plumbing and orgasms. I have written erotic shorts in which the protagonists don't talk to each other - both Cruel Enchantment and Dark Enchantment feature stories wherein the lovers have no common language - but it's petty rare for me.
Dialogue is there for tension and power-play, for emotion and revelation, for plot and character. It has to sound realistic but not be dull or longwinded. It has to convey information that moves the book forward, but not come across like a memo in capital letters from the author (Oh how I struggle with that!). It has to be dynamic and surprising, yet flow seamlessly. It has to be hot and horny and hit the sexual trigger buttons for readers, but at the same time not clichéd and risible.
Jeez. I wonder sometimes how I dare even try.
:-)
I think your do very well with dialogue; I wouldn't have known it was a struggle if you hadn't said so...
ReplyDeleteThat's a compliment! Thank you Craig!
ReplyDeleteI agree, Janine.
ReplyDeleteI like dialogue.
For what it's worth I think you make a damn good job of it.
ReplyDeleteAnd yes, Sherlock rules. Roll on the new season!
Hmm. I meant I agreed with Craig, I hope that was clear!
ReplyDeleteThanks Jo and Liz :-) Roll on more Sherlock - yes! And Holmes is Smaug and Watson is Bilbo in The Hobbit too - it's like a wierd geek cheese-dream :-D
ReplyDeleteI have a fabulous book on dialogue - 'writing dialogue' (funnily enough) by Tom Chiarella. Got it because I'm terrified of dialogue. It's got some wonderful ideas in it.
ReplyDeleteI think you do grand at dialogue too, but then I think the things we find most difficult sometimes come out best cause we put most effort in, no?