0

Subtext Studio

A five-week course on writing what isn't said.
0 Enrolled
0

Course Overview

Overview

Five weeks on subtext as a craft. Not as an idea or a vibe — as a set of installable moves. We teach you to write deflection, avoidance, threat, longing, and apology WITHOUT using the words. Includes the famous Subtext Drill, which writers reuse for years. By the end you can write a scene where two characters are discussing a missing dog and the reader knows they’re actually fighting about the marriage. Five weeks. Twenty-five lessons. The deliverable is the skill to write what isn’t said.

What’s inside

  • 5 modules, 25 lessons + Subtext Drills — drill-heavy, scene-rewrite focused
  • Mindset Maven Test that names YOUR specific subtext-failure pattern
  • 5 guided meditations averaging 10 minutes — paired to drill sessions
  • Toolkit: the Five Subtext Categories Reference + the Subtext Drill Worksheet
  • Lifetime access, unlimited retakes — subtext skills compound over years
  • Companion blog post per module — public, perfect for the writer whose dialogue is on the nose

Who this is for

  • Playwrights
  • Screenwriters
  • Novelists
  • Memoirists

FAQs

Won’t subtext feel artsy or pretentious?
Good subtext doesn’t read as ‘subtext.’ Good subtext reads as people having a real conversation that’s about more than the surface. The artsy feeling is a subtext-execution failure, not an inherent property of the technique.

What’s the Subtext Drill?
A specific exercise — write a scene where two characters talk about ONE small surface topic while the actual conflict is something else entirely. Reuse the drill on dozens of pairs (couple, parent/child, boss/employee, exes). The drill is the load-bearing skill of the course.

What are the five subtext categories?
Deflection (avoiding the actual subject), Avoidance (refusing to name a thing), Threat (warning without naming the threat), Longing (wanting without admitting it), Apology (saying sorry without saying sorry). Module 1 covers the framework.

Will this work for genre fiction (mystery, thriller, romance)?
Yes — subtext is critical in genre. In romance especially. In mystery, the subtext IS the suspense. Module 5 covers genre adaptations.

How does this relate to BM-148 (Voice Differentiation)?
Voice is HOW the character speaks; subtext is WHAT they’re not saying. Both layers matter; this course covers the second. Pair the two for full dialogue work.

Can I retake?
Yes. Unlimited. Subtext skills compound.

What one student said

★★★★★

“I bought this for the novel and discovered I had been writing sermon dialogue badly for ten years. (I am a Lutheran pastor; the weekly sermon involves quoting scripture and reframing it for the congregation.) The subtext drills changed how I render parable dialogue. My congregation has noticed. My novel is also better. Two birds; one stone; surprisingly relevant course.”

Curriculum

  • 5 Sections
  • 20 Lessons
  • Lifetime
Expand all sectionsCollapse all sections

Instructor

User Avatar

L. A. Walton

0.0
0 Reviews
0 Students
36 Courses