What are your favorite ways to make dialogue feel natural and engaging? Any tricks for keeping conversations interesting without slowing down the story?
years ago, the first time I tried writing a novel. One of my first things I noticed after I got over the rush of doing something big... was after a break I came back and decided it had problems. One of my main problems, was the MC seemed okay to me, but the supporting characters were tending to be "off". You can be told "know those characters inside and out! They should be very real to you!", but I think this is one of those things that's easier said than done.
dialogue from the supporting characters was definitely a big thing.
Example: cops bantering on a murder scene. Its in every investigation book, its in every investigation movie. Its compulsory. Why was MY "two cops bantering" before the detective got there so... cliche and forced.
A long time later, I was reading a paperback. In the story, a female entertainment lawyer had written a sort of "Tom Clancy" novel and decided a male author pen name was the way to go. She contracted a client, to play this part. As he had written his own book that was good but just shy of great, she felt he looked and more importantly could talk like an author, and do it.
In the course of her "talking" to him, about her own novel which was getting offers and interest from all sides... she gave some general advice. One of which, I never forgot. It changed my (writing) life. Here, I'll share it with you:
how did you do your character development? Did you do the circle diagrams thing, or did you do the bio sheet way. Then she shared how SHE did it. "Use character models". Her way, was to pick out someone in real life, to represent the character in the story. Now you have a real person, to describe. How they talk. How they walk. The little tics and things they do, or don;t do. How they dress. How they carry themselves You know them good enough that you can sort of guess how they respond to things.
it made perfect sense to me. All the TRADITIONAL "how to create a character" methods, were simply that. I was creating a character out of thin air. I do this? Its a real live person. With flaws and short comings. With strengths and weaknesses. You never tell anyone WHO the character model used really was. And just like a light switch got flicked on, I was at my truck stop. This one waitress. I just SAW her, as the receptionist side character. I've known her for several years from there. Now? My receptionist was "alive". That side character seemed very real, because she kind of was a real life person. Things I knew or could infer about the real life character model? Translated directly into/onto the receptionist novel character.
My dialogue, remember. It instantly changed. Why, I can just close my eyes and "hear" her talking, or imagine how she would react.
refined: you can use ONE person, for the physical model. And another for everything else about them.
example: Maybe Rutger Hauer (RIP, R.H.) is the MC's right hand man. For looks.
And, maybe your brother is how he talks and reacts and thinks.
this process links you in for strengths AND the important shortcomings and weaknesses needed to make a character real.
I started doing this for important characters, and then started doing it for *all* characters.
The results were instantaneous.
Hey. If I feel a few tidbits I pick uop here and there, helped me.
This, is my best chance to share back.
I've never heard this advice, from any other source.
All I see are the same old "circle diagrams" and "bio"/"backstory" techniques.
Try this on a new story, your next one?
watch all your characters suddenly come alive.
hear dialogue now colored in and it seems more realistic.
remember the "two cops bantering on scene" waiting on the main detective?
they were "character modeled" on two old farts at the truck stop, that always gab and pick at each other.
BANG! they came alive, in their bit roles.
My main characters? No more Mary Sue Gary Stu syndrome.
now when I plan a book, I'm looking around me, finding my character models.
when you get the right one, you can just tell.