Fiction Writing Masterclass

Lesson 6: How to Write Effective Dialogue

This week we’ll focus on building characters through dialogue to ensure your characters are clearly identifiable and don’t all sound the same. We’ll also look at the differences between showing and telling and when you should use each one.

Elizabeth Dawber
12 min readMar 28, 2022

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Image created by the author in Canva

This is the sixth lesson in an 8-part series on writing fiction. It has been designed to take you through the process of writing a short story from start to finish. For more information, including the content covered in each lesson, check out my introductory post here.

As a fiction writer, dialogue is one of the most valuable tools at your disposal. It is essential for building character, moving the narrative along, and creating tension. If your characters are just having conversations because you are looking for something for them to do, then those conversations will likely fall flat. Therefore, when writing dialogue, you need to make sure it fulfills these two essential requirements:

  1. A strong reason why the characters are engaging with each other. Is a mother wanting an explanation as to why her son skipped school? Is a husband questioning why his wife…

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Elizabeth Dawber
Elizabeth Dawber

Written by Elizabeth Dawber

English literature & creative writing grad | MWC semi-finalist | Former editor @ The Startup | I write about this thing called life | Human | Pen for hire |🇬🇧

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