Beta Reader Group discussion
Writing Advice & Discussion
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Common Writing Problems
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Examples I've seen in published books:
1- Walking down the street, my eyes checked for anything out of place. (I honestly hope my eyes will never walk, down or up a street.)
2- Getting out of bed, my skin crawled...(Talk about a scary image!)
So, yes, vary your sentence structure, but be sure they make sense.





Characters discussing things is fine, but the way they discuss it should reflect how much they already know about the subject. I find this most common in stories that require extensive world building. Primarily fantasy.

I use that form in a flashback if and when it requires something that will happen later in the story. It's a teaser.
"Do you remember when he was caught by his mother?"
"The time he was grounded for a month."
"And he....." Then the two laughed out-loud.
Or to show what type of person he is and why something happens later on in the story.

It's a very human thing, and now that you've mentioned it, a pretty good way of providing backstory without making it seem like that's what you're doing.

An assassin is giving a detailed report to her handler about the students she's been spying on.
In both cases, the other characters didn't know the information given

"I'm so excited about the tennis match! The teacher is so hot!"
Overuse of exclamation marks in dialogue add to the "fluffy" feel, too.
There's also robotic dialogue that sounds forced and unnatural, because the author is putting words in a character's mouth that don't belong there.
Then, of course, there's the frustrating dialogue that's there only to explain, as Ime mentioned. I'm currently beta reading a work with plenty of that to go around.
In my opinion, good dialogue is vital to a story. Not just to improve flow or structure, but because it can also be a great way to get to know a character and to reveal their emotions.

Brother 1: "I really want to get that new video game."
Brother 2: "Dad walked out on us for that woman last year. We can't afford it without him."
There's a lot of info in Brother 2's response that explains their situation but doesn't do it very tactfully, I suppose. Compared to this...
Brother 1: I really want to get that new video game.
Brother 2: You know we can't afford games anymore.
Brother 1: Why not?
Brother 2: You know why.
Brother 1: We can work more hours to pay for it. We can't blame everything on dad not being here.
There's more nuance to the second conversation.

I am a previously published author looking to add BETA readers to my already established BETA circle. I have a manuscript ready to be read in the next few months. My genre is fantasy YA.
Please let me know if you're interested. Again, I won't need your services until a later date, but I need contact information and to make sure you book me in :)
You can reach me at giselle@gisellesimlett.com
Thank you.
Kind Regards,
Giselle.
Sharon