
Hi SErs! Harmony here 🙂
Today, I’d like to take another look at dialogue. Because this is such a large topic, I have spread the topic over a few posts. As the post title suggests, we’ll look at ‘talking heads’ with dialogue today.
‘This is Detective Inspector Treen. Mike Treen.’
‘Yes?’
‘You reported your son, Jayden Kellow, missing an hour ago, yes?’
‘Yes. Yes, I did. Have you found him?’
‘Not yet. I’m sure he’ll turn up just fine. Boys his age … well, you’d be surprised how often they get drunk and collapse at a friend’s house. And then, come the next day, they show up at home full of a hangover and remorse. And it hasn’t been twenty-four hours yet.’
‘Not my Jay. He’s not like that. And he said he was stuck …’
‘May I ask you some questions, Mrs Kellow … Carole?’
What is Talking Head Syndrome? Basically, talkings heads happens when we have line upon line of speakers with no beats, tags, or other attributions. This brings two major issues to the page: 1) The reader cannot identify the speaker easily, especially with 3 or more characters, and 2) We introduce ‘white room syndrome’ into the bargain. The characters exist in a vacumm in this scenario. Below, I copy in the dialogue as it originally appeared in The Vanished Boy before I butchered it ….
‘This is Detective Inspector Treen. Mike Treen.’ The voice sounds deep and gravelly and measured. A voice you trust automatically. Like soft, deep, brown puppy-dog eyes always leave you with a warm feeling.
‘Yes?’ Terror and dread constrict her throat and chest until she feels nearly suffocated. She’s convinced the police have found Jay’s body somewhere.
‘You reported your son, Jayden Kellow, missing an hour ago, yes?’
Carole clears her throat. ‘Yes. Yes, I did. Have you found him?’ Her voice comes out all high-pitched and scared-sounding. Not her voice at all.
A slight pause precedes a cautious reply, ‘Not yet. I’m sure he’ll turn up just fine. Boys his age … well, you’d be surprised how often they get drunk and collapse at a friend’s house. And then, come the next day, they show up at home full of a hangover and remorse. And it hasn’t been twenty-four hours yet.’
Carole grits her teeth and shakes her head. ‘Not my Jay. He’s not like that. And he said he was stuck …’
‘May I ask you some questions, Mrs Kellow … Carole?’
As you can see in the above extract, the beats and attributions help us to identify each speaker. Also, by adding in these extras, we introduce emotions and thoughts, which give life to the characters. This also prevents your speakers from existing in a vacumm as we show the relationships in just a few words.
Top Tip: If you have a lengthy section of dialogue, add in an activity that one or more of your characters can engage in as they talk. You can use anything that aids in character and world building … dialogue while catching and moving a spider, performing surgery, brewing coffee, cooking breakfast, in a car chase with a suspect … you get the jist.
Remember: Any dialogue, including beats and tags, is there to further your plot. Don’t ever use this as filler or to info dump or drop in back story. This is not the place.
The take-away from all of this is to avoid talking head and white room syndromes. As I said in my previous dialogue posts: Before we break the rules, we need to know the rules, and we only break them if we have a valid reason to do so to enhance our artistic expression in writing.
That’s it from me for today. I hope you find this post useful. And I’ll see you again on May 31st 🙂
Post One: Name Dropping can be found HERE.
Post Two: Tags and Beats can be found HERE.
Post Three: Punctuation can be found HERE.
©2021 Harmony Kent
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I edit out a lot of white-room syndrome for my clients. I do enjoy snappy dialogue, but sometimes you need to ground the reader. Good point, Harmony.
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For sure, great dialogue is a fine art. Thanks, Staci 🙂
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Love this one, Harmony! Excellent examples. Thanks!
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So pleased you liked the examples. Thanks, Felicia 🙂
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An excellent illustration of Talking Heads and the opposite, Harmony.
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“What is Talking Head Syndrome?” LOL. Does this only happen in writing, right? If it is a video, it will be easier…
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Lol. Yep, at least the video shows you the speakers. Thanks, Haoyando 🙂
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Excellent post Harmony. All great points. Nothing worse than jumbled diaogues and informationless dialogues. 🙂 x
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Totally agree. Thanks, Debby 🙂
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Another great post, Harmony! I sometimes get sucked into writing dialogue without the extras and have to go back and fill it in. This was a perfect example of how important those beats and tags are. 🙂
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So glad you liked the examples and post. Thanks, Yvi 🙂
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A super post, Harmony. I like how you demonstrate using beats to portray emotion even when it’s just two people talking. And it adds depth to the story big time because we don’t just hear the words, we feel them. Great examples! Thank you for sharing!
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So pleased the examples worked for you. Thanks, Jan 🙂
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A very useful post and a great example, Harmony. Thanks. 😁
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Thanks, John. Glad you found the post useful 🙂
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Still working to improve.
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Excellent points, Harmony. If we do have “rapid-fire dialogue” between two speakers, it’s best to keep it to three lines with no attrib or body cue. Three speakers? Like you said, way too confusing. 🙂
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For certain. Thanks, Sue 🙂
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Wonderful advice, Harmony. I’ve read plenty of books where I’ve had to backtrack to figure out who said what. The whole flow of the story comes to a stop for me.
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Me too. I’m reading one now that made me do just that. Thanks, Teri 🙂
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Excellent post, Harmony! Your reminders, accompanied by examples, really make it clear how important it is to use dialogue correctly. My first drafts fail miserably until they’re rescued by a rewrite, beta readers, and my wonderful editor. 😊
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The wonderful thing is that those rewrites, beta comments, and edits help us learn and hone our craft. Glad you enjoyed the post. Thanks, Gwen 🙂
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Nothing helps send the message home as a good (bad) example. Thanks!
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Totally agree! Thanks, Dan 🙂
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Reblogged this on Jeanne Owens, author.
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Thanks for the share, Jeanne 🙂
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You’re welcome 🙂
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Reblogged this on Author Don Massenzio and commented:
Check out this helpful post from Harmony Kent via the Story Empire Blog with the topic: Don’t Talk Like That: Talking Heads
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Thanks so much, Don 🙂
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You’re welcome.
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Great pointers, and I’m sure I’ve been guilty of this before.
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It’s easy to fall into when we’re in the flow. Thanks, Craig 🙂
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I tend to have white space in my first draft. I like what Mae said about thinking through it. Writing slow just means there isn’t a lot of clean-up and editing to do later.
In the first example, I couldn’t help but think. “Bond. James Bond.” Having read your story with the dialogue beats/action, that never occurred to me when I read the passage. 🙂
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Lols, Joan. It’s interesting when taking our writing out of it’s context every once in a while. It never fails to amaze me how things stand out that might not otherwise 🙂
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Great post, Harmony! Trying to figure out who said what is a quick way to lose your reader and pull them from the story. Fantastic tips!
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For sure! Thanks, Jill 🙂
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Hi, Harmony
This is a fascinating post as always. I HOPE I’m not guilty, especially as I don’t use dialogue tags.
However, my real comment is your use of colour behind the text. I usually find SE posts hard to read, so if I comment, take it as a compliment, folks. Yours was so interesting I squinted. No need today. 🙂
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So pleased the colour helped with the visuals, Sarah, and glad you enjoyed the post. May I suggest having a try with some dialogue tags here and there? It’s definitely better to have identifiers outside of the quotes rather than within them 🙂
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I’ve noticed a rise in people doing this no tag thing. It gets confusing for the reasons you stated. Not sure how people can follow.
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I’ve always done it, Charles. I like the flow without the name of the POV character, but it takes a great deal of concentration – and picky beta readers – to make sure I get it right.
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You really do have to take care to get this right. As a reader, I definitely prefer some tags over none 🙂
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I always have trouble recognizing who’s talking when there aren’t any tags. Forces me to backtrack and try to figure it out, which makes immersion difficult. I can see it work for certain styles like first person, but it gets confusing when you have more than two characters in a scene. At least for me.
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It truly is one of the things that drives me nuts. I hate having to stop to try and work out the speakers. Thanks, Charles, and thanks for the share 🙂
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You’re welcome. It’s definitely a frustration for me. Another reason I read more graphic novels than word ones.
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I’m like Judith. When I write, I’m constantly thinking about what my characters are doing or what they’re feeling, also taking their surroundings into account. It means I write slow, but I also have a thoroughly fleshed out draft when I’m done.
Good reminder post, Harmony!
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That’s a good way to do it, Mae 🙂
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A great post, Harmony:) I tend to write talking heads in my first draft and need to go back and add in movement and background. I love your examples it really shows a difference between the two. More good advice!
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It’s not something I ever do; I have to picture the character where they are, what’s happening, and how they feel. Perhaps that’s why I’m such a slow writer! Thanks for the brilliant post, Harmony – made me think.
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It’s good that you picture it all, Judith. So glad you liked the post 🙂
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It does make for slow writing, Judith, but it’s worth it. 🙂
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Thanks, Denise. It sounds like you add words in your edits … something I tend to do as well 🙂
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