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Harv wrote: "Hey, Ed!Wow, you really go "tag crazy" with your GoodReads posts! [amazon, e-readers, ed-lynskey, fiction, kindle, nook, reading, writing] Should I start mega-tagging my posts? Does that SEO e..."
No idea about the tags, Harv. They seem to be used everywhere. Try them out. Anyway, dialectic speech isn't done nowadays. The last novel I read written like that was by Andrew Lytle. I finished it but only because I like his work. Thanks for the comments.
I Suspect that I have an advantage as a senior of this society because I have had to use my imagination while I read. Before television one imagined the settings and characters of a story that we heard on the radio. I actually supply my characters and settings of stories that I read. When i read a hardboiled PI I set sceene the as a Bogart character my Westerns usually get a J Wayne type. and their tone and inflections of speach matches my imagined characters
sarg wrote: "I Suspect that I have an advantage as a senior of this society because I have had to use my imagination while I read. Before television one imagined the settings and characters of a story that we ..."Those old radio shows sound fun. I've heard parts of Orson Welles' War of the Worlds. Hard to believe radio had that much impact on society. Have a good one, Sarg.



Wow, you really go "tag crazy" with your GoodReads posts! [amazon, e-readers, ed-lynskey, fiction, kindle, nook, reading, writing] Should I start mega-tagging my posts? Does that SEO effort glom extra views?
About character speech: You got me thinking. My personal bias is that "readability" has to be central; that whatever lilt or drawl or syntax must take a back-seat to mainstream comprehension. That's just me. And I'm sure there are exceptions. But for my recent Sci-Fi novel I had a grand scheme of feminized language that I had to dial way back, because I realized in the first draft that my text would be unreadable for most readers.
Because it is ultimately about "The Reader." If we, as writers, go to too far in verisimilitude, we may fail. Sometimes a hint may be enough. That's just me. Cheers! @hg47