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  • Noah Cochran started the topic Miscellaneous Mayhem in the forum General Writing Discussions 4 years, 2 months ago

    Alrighty y’all, I’ve had several questions and thoughts piling up, and I thought I might as well put them all in one post. So here we go.

    Replacements for lookI’m not referring to the context ‘he looked at the barn,’ I’m referring to the phrase ‘he gave her a flat look.’ Any replacement for that come to mind? I feel like a use it a lot. Stare  is an obvious one, but in most contexts that doesn’t work.

    Thoughts on ‘said’ replacements: In a lot of books I’ve been reading recently, the authors have replaced said  with so many different words that I start to get irritated. It is especially annoying when they replace nearly every said  with something like ‘offered’ or ‘asserted’ or ‘replied’ or ‘noted’ or ‘commented.’ I personally try to do this rarely, and I never used any of the words listed above. I used things such as ‘growled’ ‘roared’ or ‘hissed,’ but seeing that ‘said’ is usually invisible to the reader, I prefer that in most cases. What are y’all’s thoughts?

    Facial Features: To what extent to y’all usually describe facial features? Any tips for doing so?

    Parents: When having a character refer to their parent in introspection, do you use ‘his father’ or the father’s actually name? I tend to use both.

    She said vs said she: I much prefer the former (the latter sounds like passive voice to me for some reason), but it also has a unique sound and sometimes I do like it. I noticed that older writing uses the latter much more often than newer writings, but what are y’all’s thoughts? Some of my cousins say they like a mix of both.

    He gave a tight smile vs he smiled tightly: I tend to use the former due to the fact that I avoid adverbs, but which do y’all prefer? Does the former sound strange?

    Chapter Names: Are these a thing of the past? I personally don’t use them, but I was just curious.

    Inches, feet, meters, etc.. in medieval fiction: Do y’all use these terms in fantasy or use the more medieval sounding ‘pace’ or ‘span?’

    Voice Description: I have a habit of describing voice a lot (telling, I know), but just saying ‘said’ instead of ‘he said in a rough voice’ doesn’t carry the intended purpose. Thoughts?

    Direct (italicized with I’s and me’s) vs indirect thought: I was recently watching a lecture by an incredibly famous author, and he says that he likes to use direct/italicized thought that used I’s and me’s to not only make sure the reader is grounded in the introspection, but also to add flavor. I tend to not use it, but now I’m uncertain. Thoughts?

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