Your characters tell each other everything. They are unrealistically forthcoming. They are also boring.
The misdiagnosisThe misdiagnosis is that clear dialogue helps the reader. That if your characters are upfront, the scene moves.
The real diagnosisHonest dialogue does not move a scene. It explains it. Real conversation withholds. Real conversation circles. Real conversation lies politely. If your characters are not withholding, your dialogue is doing exposition with their mouths.
What To Withhold
| What | Effect | Where To Use It |
|---|---|---|
| The true emotion | Reader leans in | Confrontation scenes |
| The real reason | Tension stays high | Negotiation scenes |
| The recent event | Pacing tightens | First date / first meeting scenes |
| The character's wound | Backstory pressure | Long conversations |
Three Subtext Rewrites
- Pick a scene where two characters are honest. Rewrite it where both lie about one thing.
- Pick a scene that explains the plot. Rewrite it where neither character mentions the plot.
- Pick a scene where the character cries on cue. Rewrite it where they laugh wrong instead.
Honest dialogue is for therapy. Real characters are sitting across a kitchen table lying through their teeth about who ate the last cookie. The cookie is symbolic. So is everything else.
Pick your most exposition-heavy dialogue scene. Rewrite it with the new rule: every character is lying about one thing. Watch what happens.
The dare (not assignment)Take a scene. Identify what each character is hiding. Rewrite without either of them naming it. The reader will fill in the gap.
Image promptTwo characters' silhouettes seen across a small cafe table, both holding coffee cups. The space between them is the focus. Painterly. Cream and dark blue. No clear faces.
— The Book Maven
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