Have you read a book where the characters growled, mused, or
grated everything? Did it annoy all hell out of you? It sure does me! I don’t
go through my life applying such tags to the things people say to me day in and
day out – I just process the vocal tone and body language to reach a conclusion
about the nature of the interaction.
If you’re a writer, you might pause to ponder if you’ve been
guilty of this sin. I won’t wait for you to answer though because I already
know you are guilty as charged. Every writer is.How do I know this?
Because it’s a beginner mistake.
We all do this in our early days. You might be thinking of some of your early work right now - you know, the ones you've buried in hopes they will never see the light of day again? If you’re looking
at your current WIP and it's littered with so-called ‘saidisms’, I strongly urge
you to go through and delete all those nasties. Said is an excellent word. Said
is an under-appreciated word. No matter how much you think you might be
over-using it, you’re probably not. And if you actually are, there are better
alternatives than ‘hissed’, ‘bellowed’ and ‘snarled’. Don’t even touch ‘grinned’.
Trust me on this one.
In the traditionally published world, this kind of writing
will have you hit the rejection pile so fast your head is spinning. There are,
of course, exceptions (see my post about Joe Abercrombie here). One is that occasionally
contracted writers are allowed to get away with sloppy writing mistakes that
newbie writers can’t – something I don’t agree with, but hey, I don’t make the
rules.
Even more occasionally, a debut writer will get away with
this – I can only assume because their story is so compelling the errors were
allowable. If you’ve been following my #writetip series, you may have seen the
one that said great storytelling can sometimes make up for mediocre writing,
and I can only assume this is the case here.
In the self-publishing world, though, the only control is
that applied by the writer. Some writers don’t know any better – they’re new,
and they haven’t yet learned a lot of craft, and in that first stage of
writing, that euphoric bliss of unconscious incompetence that is the
first step of learning anything, they publish their work. Ignorance really is
bliss. I even know a few writers who, once they learned a bit more craft,
pulled their ebooks from distribution because the second stage of learning, conscious
incompetence, isn’t nearly so kind to the ego.
Other writers who know better are tempted into the sin, or
ignore their editors, and so a few saidisms might slip through.
Last week – or was it the week before? I’ve been sick and
dehydrated to the point of near-hallucinations, so I really can’t be sure. But
in the space of 5 minutes I started and discarded three books. Why? Because of evil saidisms.
I can forgive a few creative alternatives to ‘said’. But if
you have too many in the first few pages you are likely to annoy me to the
point of putting your book down. And if yours is the third book in that list, I
am even more likely to be unforgiving. Congratulations to R.S. Guthrie, whose Black
Beast was the fourth book I tried that day, and which I have now read to
the end.
Why do saidisms annoy me so much? If you’re a reader (and
not a writer), they may not consciously annoy you, but it’s likely they
have a negative effect on you, even if you can’t put your finger on it. And
they annoy me for the same reason, it’s just that so many years of writing and
an impossibly long list of workshops (check out my website if you haven’t seen
all the workshops I’ve done) leave me in a position where I can articulate
precisely why they annoy me.
‘Said’ is invisible. The reader reads it, but they don’t
consciously acknowledge it. They just skim past it. It’s primary function is to
alert the reader to who is talking. When a writer gets creative with speaker
tags, and uses something else, the reader will, perhaps not consciously,
attempt to match the tag to the words. Do they sound like something that would
be growled? Is it appropriate to shout that line? Can that sentence actually be
hissed? Wait... it’s got no sibilants in it. How can you hiss that?
And now you have a problem. The reader is paying more attention to
matching dialogue to tags than your actual story.
Jack Bickham, in 'The 38 Most Common Fiction Writing
Mistakes', says 90% of your speaker tags should be ‘said’. No, that doesn’t mean
90% of your dialogue should use ‘said’. What it means is that, where you use
tags, 90% of them should be 'said'. There are, of course, other alternatives to
speaker tags, such as no tag (where not needed) or an action tag, where the
writer describes what a character is doing. This helps to give context to the
dialogue and avoid the ‘talking heads’ problem.
In short, using alternatives to said is distracting. It can
jolt the reader out of the story. For reasons you can’t precisely identify, you
may not feel as deeply involved in the story as you’d like. Sound familiar? Ever
experienced that problem? I bet everyone has, at least once, even if you couldn’t
say what it was you didn’t like about the book.
Dialogue should speak for itself. We should
understand the likely tone from the words themselves, and this extends to
adding adverbs after said – there is no need to say ‘I’m sorry’
apologetically. We already see it’s apologetic from the words. And for god’s
sake, words cannot be grimaced or grinned as in ‘I know,’ he grimaced. ‘Grimaced’
in this sentence is necessarily a modifier of the spoken words, which just
doesn’t make sense. The correct structure would be ‘I know.’ He grimaced. The exception is arguably things like 'whispered' and 'shouted' where the reader can't actually gauge the tone from the words. And, of course, 'lied', but don't ever use this for a non-viewpoint character or you'll be head-hopping (unless you are using omniscient third).
In the spirit of fun, here’s a poem by Franklin P. Adams. He
wrote this poem using the attribution tags he found in two stories in a single
magazine.
Monotonous Variety
She "greeted" and he "volunteered";
She "giggled": he "asserted";
She "queried" and he "lightly veered";
She "drawled" and he "averted";
She "scoffed," she "laughed" and he "averred";
He "mumbled," "parried," and "demurred."
She "languidly responded"; he
"Incautiously assented";
Doretta "proffered lazily";
Will "speedily invented";
She "parried," "whispered," "bade," and "mused";
He "urged," "acknowledged," and "refused."
She "softly added"; "she alleged";
He "consciously invited";
She "then corrected"; William "hedged";
She "prettily recited";
She "nodded" "stormed," and "acquiesced";
He "promised," "hastened," and "confessed."
Doretta "chided"; "cautioned" Will;
She "voiced" and he "defended";
She "vouchsafed"; he "continued still";
She "sneered" and he "amended";
She "smiled," she "twitted," and she "dared"
He "scorned," "exclaimed," "pronounced," and "flared."
He "waived," "believed," "explained," and "tried";
"Commented" she; he "muttered";
She "blushed," she "dimpled," and she "sighed";
He 'ventured" and he "stuttered";
She "spoke," "suggested," and "pursued";
He "pleaded," "pouted," "called," and "viewed."
O syonymble writers, ye
Whose work is so high-pricey.
Think ye not that variety
May haply be too spicy?
Meseems that in an elder day
They had a thing or two to--say.
Monotonous Variety
She "greeted" and he "volunteered";
She "giggled": he "asserted";
She "queried" and he "lightly veered";
She "drawled" and he "averted";
She "scoffed," she "laughed" and he "averred";
He "mumbled," "parried," and "demurred."
She "languidly responded"; he
"Incautiously assented";
Doretta "proffered lazily";
Will "speedily invented";
She "parried," "whispered," "bade," and "mused";
He "urged," "acknowledged," and "refused."
She "softly added"; "she alleged";
He "consciously invited";
She "then corrected"; William "hedged";
She "prettily recited";
She "nodded" "stormed," and "acquiesced";
He "promised," "hastened," and "confessed."
Doretta "chided"; "cautioned" Will;
She "voiced" and he "defended";
She "vouchsafed"; he "continued still";
She "sneered" and he "amended";
She "smiled," she "twitted," and she "dared"
He "scorned," "exclaimed," "pronounced," and "flared."
He "waived," "believed," "explained," and "tried";
"Commented" she; he "muttered";
She "blushed," she "dimpled," and she "sighed";
He 'ventured" and he "stuttered";
She "spoke," "suggested," and "pursued";
He "pleaded," "pouted," "called," and "viewed."
O syonymble writers, ye
Whose work is so high-pricey.
Think ye not that variety
May haply be too spicy?
Meseems that in an elder day
They had a thing or two to--say.
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14 comments:
I love this post!
I've had a few comments to the same effect on Twitter. It would appear I have struck a nerve.
I find that bad habit chiefly in Urban Fantasy. I have to admit though, I'm not a fan egregious saidisms and I do notice them ;-) especially when dialog inflection in the character's voice makes it obvious who said what.
Excellent post! I am guilty of this, I admit! My second and third books are written so much better because I learnt this lesson while writting my first! Unfortunately I have too many saidisms in my first book but, hey, it's all about learning and growing and that's why blogs like this are so vital to writers. I think as a new writer you're afraid that the reader will not get what you're trying to put across, but learning how to be good at creating atmosphere and emotion through the dialogue alone is what's important and makes excellent writing. Thanks, Ciara, for my lesson and reminder of the day!
Love this, and I just took a boatload of notes from this post. Thank you!
LOL we all have those moments. I can forgive the odd saidism here and there, and I'm more forgiving of the occasional adverb than a list of mused, ponderd, announced, noted etc. When the page is full of them, they get hard to ignore.
My pleasure, Monique. I assure you, I have manuscripts somewhere littered with saidisms, and I expect it's more than just my first! OK, I'm a slow learner, and I started young *shrugs* I think you are probably right - it's fear of not properly communicating the message. Also, lack of understanding of show don't tell (if at that stage the phrase has even been heard) and I was well into my 20s before I understood what it even meant!
Glad to help, Amberr :-) Feel free to ask questions anytime.
Great post! using action tags keeps he story moving and creating a scene where you don't have to tell the reader who is speaking (because they can clearly see it) is at times tough but so worth it on a re read.
It brings the scene alive so much better. I can't stand 'talking heads'. You feel like two people are just frozen while they have a conversation and that's so unrealictic!
agreed. the only thing worse than these kind of "saidisms" are saidisms that are also contain adverbs. aka things that end in "ly".
e.g "He said stridently" "he tittered nervously"
dialogue attributions (saidisms) which also contain adverbs are like crap carefully layered ontop of more crap... and after 3 pages of it in your manuscript its becomes like the compound interest of crap. Utter crap, if you will.
I can handle the occasional 'grumbled' or the rare 'said flatly', but together is unbearable, and as you've said, three pages of it is enough to make me want to stab someone.
I'm reading Brandon Sanderson's 'Warbreaker' and I've noticed it's not as cleanly written as the Stormlight Archives, including a few saidisms. But they are rare enough that while I note them as I read them they don't spoil my enjoyment of the book.
editing myself. lol. "I'm not a fan OF egregious saidisms". Sorry, just woke up.
Thanks for the post. I'm a new writer, and admit that I'm getting confused by all the conflicting advice. I've tried to keep the tags to a minimum when possible, but admit that I've been using quite a few 'saidisms'. Luckily I'm still on the first draft, so there's plenty of time to fix the problem. I hope I can find a great editor.
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