About The Book
Writers Workshop of Science Fiction and Fantasy is a collection of essays
and interviews by and with many of the movers-and-shakers in the
industry. Each contributor covers the specific element of craft he or she
excels in. Expect to find varying perspectives and viewpoints, which is
why you many find differing opinions on any particular subject.
This is, after all, a collection of advice from professional
storytellers. And no two writers have made it to the stage via the same
journey-each has made his or her own path to success. And that’s one of
the strengths of this book. The reader is afforded the luxury of
discovering various approaches and then is allowed to choose what works best
for him or her.
List of Authors
Neil Gaiman
Orson Scott Card
Ursula K. Le Guin
Alan Dean Foster
James Gunn
Tim Powers
Harry Turtledove
Larry Niven
Joe Haldeman
Kevin J. Anderson
Elizabeth Bear
Jay Lake
Nancy Kress
George Zebrowski
Pamela Sargent
Mike Resnick
Ellen Datlow
James Patrick Kelly
Jo Fletcher
Stanley Schmidt
Gordon Van Gelder
Lou Anders
Peter Crowther
Ann VanderMeer
John Joseph Adams
Nick Mamatas
Lucy A. Snyder
Alethea Kontis
Nisi Shawl
Jude-Marie Green
Nayad A. Monroe
G. Cameron Fuller
Jackie Gamber
Amanda DeBord Max Miller
Jason Sizemore
Orson Scott Card
Ursula K. Le Guin
Alan Dean Foster
James Gunn
Tim Powers
Harry Turtledove
Larry Niven
Joe Haldeman
Kevin J. Anderson
Elizabeth Bear
Jay Lake
Nancy Kress
George Zebrowski
Pamela Sargent
Mike Resnick
Ellen Datlow
James Patrick Kelly
Jo Fletcher
Stanley Schmidt
Gordon Van Gelder
Lou Anders
Peter Crowther
Ann VanderMeer
John Joseph Adams
Nick Mamatas
Lucy A. Snyder
Alethea Kontis
Nisi Shawl
Jude-Marie Green
Nayad A. Monroe
G. Cameron Fuller
Jackie Gamber
Amanda DeBord Max Miller
Jason Sizemore
Writers Workshop Excerpt
“Nothing fills a page faster than dialogue,” the writer
said.
There
it is, the blank page or screen, the intimidating and recurring challenge every
writer must face. The temptation is to fill that page as quickly as possible, to
advance the narrative however you can. Often the easiest way to do that, even
for writers who are not masters of dialogue, is to get the characters talking.
A few A few writers are even bold enough to begin novels or stories with a line
of dialogue, something I don’t recommend unless you possess the skills of the
early Robert A Heinlein, who began his story “Blowups Happen” with the
suspenseful line: “Put down that wrench!” Orson Scott Card also opened his
popular novel Ender’s Game with a piece of dialogue that immediately rouses the
reader’s curiosity: “‘I’ve watched through his eyes, I’ve listened through his
ears, and I tell you he’s the one.” Writing good and convincing dialogue is
usually enough of a challenge without relying on it to hook a reader right at
the beginning of one’s story. Writing dialogue, whatever the difficulties, is
generally easier than, for example, crafting descriptive passages, offering
insights into a character’s
psychology,
creating vigorous and absorbing action scenes, or presenting necessary
exposition in a graceful way.
Writers
who harbor dreams of scriptwriting may be especially prone to fill pages with
dialogue, but others also succumb, partly because dialogue is a shortcut and a
very useful one. Sometimes a few well-chosen words of conversation can
accomplish as much in a story as pages of description and exposition. There are
also a fair number of readers who are more absorbed by stretches of repartee than
by beautifully and poetically rendered descriptions. (Writers meet these people
all the time; they’re the ones who tell you they skip all the dull parts, often
meaning those carefully wrought passages that cost you so much effort.) Better
just to cut to the chase, or in this case, drop in on the conversation.
The
strength of dialogue—namely that it can be a useful shortcut—is also its weakness.
Writers who rely too much on dialogue risk leaving too much out. The writer may
hear the characters clearly and easily envision the scene, but that doesn’t mean
that the reader will. (In a review of a novel some years back, Joanna Russ wrote
that passages in that book seemed to be largely about names drinking cups of coffee,
noticing the designs of ashtrays, or riffing on the furnishings in a room, the
characters were so indistinguishable.) The beginning writer is likely to
produce dialogue in which the reader will find it hard to tell one character
from another. The useful shortcut can produce a story that is sketchy, in which
too much has been left out
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