Guest Post: Speech Patterns
Rayne Hall has published more than forty books under different pen names with different publishers in different genres, mostly fantasy, horror and non-fiction. Recent books include Storm Dancer (dark epic fantasy novel), Six Historical Tales Vol 1, Six Scary Tales Vol 1, 2 and 3 (mild horror stories), Six Historical Tales (short stories), Six Quirky Tales (humorous fantasy stories), Writing Fight Scenes and Writing Scary Scenes (instructions for authors).
She holds a college degree in publishing management and a masters degree in creative writing. Currently, she edits the Ten Tales series of multi-author short story anthologies: Bites: Ten Tales of Vampires, Haunted: Ten Tales of Ghosts, Scared: Ten Tales of Horror, Cutlass: Ten Tales of Pirates, Beltane: Ten Tales of Witchcraft, Spells: Ten Tales of Magic and more.
Her short online classes for writers intense with plenty of personal feedback. Writing Fight Scenes, Writing Scary Scenes, Writing about Magic and Magicians, The Word Loss Diet and more.
For more information about Rayne Hall go to her website.
Every character speaks differently. They
use different phrases, according to their age, education, background and
personality.
Whenever one of your characters says
something - even if it's just a greeting or thanks - let their personality
shine through.
Here are four different characters talking
about the same things:
Annie is self-centred.
She begins everything she says with “I...”
The words “me”, “my”, “mine” also feature a lot in her conversation.
“I'm sorry I'm late. I had to wait a
precious hour in a queue, as if I didn't have more important things to do.”
“I tell you, I've never been so
frightened in my life. This was my home, my shelter, my everything. I stood
there watching my belongings go up in flames, and my memories with it. My
husband was as helpless as I. I'm just glad my kids are safe.”
Barbie is insecure, indecisive and weak.
She uses qualifiers and excuses. Her
conversations contain “rather” “quite” “somewhat”, “I would like to say”,
“maybe”, “On the other hand”, “If I may say so”, “Forgive me for being so
outspoken, but”, “This may sound strange, but”, “I think that perhaps”, “More
or less”, “sort of”, “possibly”, “or so”.
“I'm sorry I'm rather late. There was
quite a queue, maybe an hour.”
“The fire was quite fierce, and spread
rather quickly. We all got out more or less in time, but if I may say so, we
were somewhat shaken.”
Claudie is gushing, effusive, and highly
strung.
She talks in superlatives: “the cutest”,
“the worst”, “the most terrifying”, with additions of “absolutely”, “totally”,
“completely”, “utterly”, “ever”, “never”, “forever.”
“I'm soooo sorry I'm late. The queue
there was absolutely appalling, and I had to wait forever and ever.”
“It was absolutely horrifying, the worst
nightmare. There was this unbelievably tremendous heat, the hugest flames
you've ever seen, and the biggest column of the darkest smoke. It went on
forever and ever, and I lost absolutely everything. It was utterly
devastating.”
Dorrie is a bossy charge-taker.
She phrases almost anything as an order:
“Do this.” “Take that.” “You mustn't think like that.”
“Don't think I'm late on purpose.
Imagine standing in a queue for an hour.”
“Imagine the flames, the smoke, the
heat. Believe me: nobody could have saved anything. Never let your own kids
play with matches.”
Beginners sometimes invent speech patterns
and graft them on the characters. The result can be clunky and unnatural, and
call attention to itself. Instead, think of how a character's personality trait
shows in the way they speak. That's subtler, funnier, more realistic.
Exercise
Choose a speech pattern that reflects an
aspect of a character's personality. Apply the pattern to something the
character says. Perhaps you can post a “before” and “after” version as a
comment so we can see the difference.
Comments
Thanks for sharing.
Now that's a mark of some skill, to change the way we think about language so quickly.
I'm definitely going to share this one!