Dirk B. wrote:Mistake #5 - Dialogue Tags: I get it. Using “he said” and “she said” is boring. However, dialogue tags are meant to be functional and not descriptive.
Gee, how about trying tags that are functional and descriptive? If your going to put a word on the page, making it serve more than one purpose seems like common sense.
Or how about the way those tags distract the user? When one of my admirals snapped at one of her subordinates, I didn't hear any feedback from distracted reviewers.
Sure, they can be overused, but having to read a fancy dialogue tag doesn't distract me in the least. Why should I write a sentence showing how my admiral is pissed off when I'm in the middle of a fast-moving battle and short choppy sentences are best suited for the scene?
Technically, I could have written "As you were, Ensign!" the admiral said, and let the exclamation mark serve in lieu of a snapping dialogue tag, but I find that I scan over punctuation marks since they're so small. I use said for regular conversation and other tags to give them added weight.
“Clever” dialogue tags are a crutch of beginning writers and those who haven’t developed their dialogue skills sufficiently. (Or those too lazy to bother.)
Once you learn how to write dialogue effectively, you need very few tags at all (context and action beats replace them), and most of the ones you do use can be “said” (without a clever -ly adjective weighing it down.) (That’s also the point where writers quit defending the use of silly tags.)
For example, in the above, there is a good chance that context would tell us it’s the admiral using that line. And the actions preceding it would likely indicate the tone (if not, then you have a bigger problem). So, the exclamation point and the tag are likely both unnecessary. If you think you need them, I suggest you challenge yourself to modify the scene where it’s obvious without them. That’s what writing is about, not finding clever dialogue tags.
Save your cleverness for great verbs and nouns and dialogue, not dialogue tags.
PS: Try reading The Road, by Cormac McCarthy, or download a sample. No quotation marks, almost no tags. (And no exclamation marks.) Yet he is still able to convey incredibly complex emotions. Now those are some serious dialogue chops.