To the untrained eye, dialogue only texts can come across as
simple and sparse. After all, there’s no narration, no scene setting, no
description or speech tags. Yet, telling a story just through one or
more character’s words is no mean feat. Manuscripts still need action and high stakes
to keeping young readers engaged, except you don’t have the luxury of narrated
words to do it in.
Despite this, it’s a style of picture book lots of us aspire to publish.
After all, there are many excellent examples of stories told exclusively
through conversation and they make for really fun read alouds. I love
acting out the roles of Dot and Duck when I take How Rude to school,
library and festival events. The paired reading provides an opportunity for
children to memorise and act out their parts, bringing books to life before
children can read themselves, and after they can, too. As well as reading for
pleasure, we also know that texts such as these support early literacy development, including
comprehension and sequencing.
However, writers have
many concerns about creating these kinds of text, especially if you are the
author and not also the illustrator. So, what are the challenges,
risks and pitfalls of writing a dialogue only picture book text, and how can we
overcome so that our texts are well received by editors?
EMOTION:
We know an emotional journey is an essential ingredient in picture
books, and this is just as important in a dialogue only text, possibly even
more so. Caring for the characters and finding out what happens to them will
keep readers turning pages. I found excellent examples of authors and
illustrators using dialogue and pictures to exaggerate and show emotion, keeping
the stakes high and propelling the plot forwards. Without this, the risk is
that your story ends up being repetitive scenes of talking heads and not much
else.
Mo Willems - Don't let the Pigeon Drive the Bus
|
Viv Schwarz - There are Cats in this Book |
TENSION:
Sitting alongside, emotion is tension. Without it we aren’t
gripped and stories aren’t interesting or engaging. A plot about two characters
enjoying a nice walk or two sharing a hat, would lack the conflict that makes a good hook. In a dialogue only text, ensuring you have a concept or characters with conflicting
wants and needs is one way of creating immediate tension. Here is a humorous
example from the ‘Already!’ series by Jory John and Benji Davies.
Jory John and Benji Davies - Goodnight Already
|
PACE:
It seems, though, that the key isn’t having emotion and
tension… rather, the timing of it. A
story told in dialogue only needs to use pace to capitalise on emotion
and tension in order to build action and energy. As can be seen in Karl Newson and Mo
Willem’s work, the emotion and tension are tracked carefully throughout the
spreads, so that they build at the optimum time…
Karl Newson and Tony Ross - I am a Tiger
|
…escalating into a crisis…
Mo Willems - Don't let the Pigeon Drive the Bus |
…and end with a satisfying payoff.
Mo Willems - Don't let the Pigeon Drive the Bus |
FLOW:
Once your arc is watertight, it will be important to give your
story flow. What will stop the story feeling staccato and static? Will a parent
need to point things out for the text to make sense? Examples of successful dialogue only books seem to have a clear structure
in place. Indeed, the narrative is weaved into repetitive conversations embedded
in a familiar and underlying structure.
Jon Klassen’s ‘I want my hat back’ and the ‘Oi!’
series by Kes Gray and Jim Field, have repetitive structures and refrains that make them
easy to follow. A strong narrative flow or familiar
structure can serve to hook readers, allowing them some grounding in world and plot.
Kes Gray and Jim Field - Oi Frog!
|
VOICE:
In dialogue only books, your characters’ conversations carry the
story. Parents won’t want to point out who is talking. Therefore, character depth and personality have never been so important. It
is worth bearing in mind that if you have more than one character, the ‘talking’ doesn’t just have to be in just the words. Use
the opportunity for dynamic body language and action to speak volumes about
your character’s personality. I find Viv Schwarz a genius at character.
On her blog, Viv talks about her process:
“I was developing the characters of Anna and Crocodile by
letting them act out some of the ideas I had for the book on paper. I had no
idea who they were yet. Anna had my haircut (it grew out gradually while I was
working on the book) and the crocodile was a toy which Anna had told me was
bought from IKEA ("when we got the wardrobes"). So, yes, that's how I
work... I recommend it, it's really rewarding to see what these little made-up
people come out with when you just let them run wild.”
PRESENTATION:
If
your dialogue-only text has a solid plot and plenty of character, you’ll want
to know how to format it for submission. There are different ways to present a text
before submission, although it is widely accepted that splitting a picture book into spreads can help hone pace
and page turns. However, in a dialogue only text, it might be necessary to
structure your words in a slightly easier format to ensure it's accessible as
possible. Here’s a section from when ‘How
Rude’ was submitted.
HOW RUDE!
Clare Helen Welsh
1.
Dot: Hello, Dot. Lovely to see
you. SMASH! [Duck knocks the sugar to the floor]
Dot: How rude!
2.
Duck: A tea party! Cool! Hang
these up.
[Duck throws hat and scarf on
the floor]
Dot: How rude!
Clare Helen Welsh and Olivier Tallec - How Rude |
As you can see, I used a script-style layout to make
it easy and clear to read. There’s no
right or wrong way, as such. Other layout possibilities might suit your text better. For example, you may want to use colour-coding or your spreads might need additional art notes for clarification, so perhaps a grid
or table format might be best. That said,
I’d be wary of adding too many illustrations notes. Reading them
can interrupt the flow and make a story hard to follow. Use them sparingly and
where essential, as is recommended for standard picture book submissions. These aren’t meant to dictate scenes
to the illustrator, rather help whoever is reading your text understand the
narrative.
I hope this post goes to show
that whilst there is a lot of skill in writing a dialogue only picture book, it is possible. Limiting a text to conversation, forces us to streamline the story and think carefully about emotion,
tension, pace, voice and character. It also makes us think cinematically, which is a
useful
skill for picture book writers.The question is… ‘Are you
up for the challenge?’
Clare is a children's writer and primary school teacher from
Devon. She writes fiction and non-fiction picture book texts - sometimes funny and
sometimes lyrical. Her next picture book, How Selfish! publishes with Quarto in April 2020 and is illustrated by Olivier Tallec. She currently
has books in development with Little Tiger Press, Quarto, Andersen, Nosy Crow
and MacMillan www.clarehelenwelsh.com
@ClareHelenWelsh
5 comments:
Thank you, Clare! This feels very relevant to me as my next book out is dialogue only, too! I had loads of fun writing it but as you mention, it can be really hard to keep the flow going, especially when there are quite a lot of characters as there are in my book. And like you said, it's really good to act out, and I'm going to be getting puppets of my characters for school visits and we'll act it out.
Thank you, and really good luck with your upcoming book. Hope you can celebrate it virtually! x
Thank you, Clare! This feels very relevant to me as my next book out is dialogue only, too! I had loads of fun writing it but as you mention, it can be really hard to keep the flow going, especially when there are quite a lot of characters as there are in my book. And like you said, it's really good to act out, and I'm going to be getting puppets of my characters for school visits and we'll act it out.
Thank you, and really good luck with your upcoming book. Hope you can celebrate it virtually! x
Hi - great post. Really interesting and will bookmark this so I can point my writing students to it. They often asked me about dialogue.
Love it.Very informative.
Hi, Claire! This is Henry. I just had a look at your book "How Rude" and I loved the illustrations! They are amazing and helped me as I'm making a storybook for my assignment. Love from Pakistan. God bless you!
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