Dogs Are Smarter Than People: Writing Life, Marriage and Motivation

By: Carrie Jones and Shaun Farrar
  • Summary

  • Join an internationally bestselling children's book author and her down-home husband and their dogs as they try to live a happy, better life by being happier, better people . You can use those skills in writing and vice versa. But we’re not perfect, just like our podcast. We’re cool with that.
    © 2018 Carrie Jones Books
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Episodes
  • How to Write Good Dialogue, Wallabies, and the Three-Beat Rule
    Nov 12 2024

    Dogs are Smarter Than People, Writing Exercise, Cool Submission Opportunity

    So, we’re been talking about dialogue in novels lately and tips about it and the purpose of it. To find any back posts, just head to LIVING HAPPY and search “dialogue.”

    One of the things that some writing stylists talk about is the three-beat rule, which is credited to Screenwriter Cynthia Whitcomb.

    Reedsy explains this as:

    “What this recommends, essentially, is to introduce a maximum of three dialogue ‘beats’ (the short phrases in speech you can say without pausing for breath) at a time. Only after these three dialogue beats should you insert a dialogue tag, action beat, or another character’s speech.”

    If it sounds a bit formulaic, well, it is. But it can be really helpful, too, the way formulas usually can.

    Reedsy made a little graphic to demonstrate all this:

    Here’s another example from Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451:

    Montag stopped at the door, with his back turned. “Millie?”

    A silence. “What?”

    “Millie? Does the White Clown love you?”

    No answer.

    “Millie, does—” He licked his lips. “Does your ‘family’ love you, love you very much, love you with all their heart and soul, Millie?”

    There’s no Rule of Three here. It’s more Rule of Three or Less, which makes it a tiny bit less formulaic, right, and it’s natural.

    What Bradbury does is integrate the dialogue (spoken word) with the dialogue beats (the stopping at the door, the silence, the licking of lips.”That action beat is different from a dialogue tag, which is the she said, he said, we yelled. It is a beat of action or emotion or setting/senses. And the dialogue beat again (which is what the rule is about) is the "short phrases in speech you can say without pausing for breath.:

    But back to the less-than-three-beat rule. When we look up that at that Bradbury piece, emotions glide right in. He communicates the tension of the scene, right? And those short lines and short bits of talking make it very fast paced.

    People's brains react to that fast pace and recognize it and look for it in dialogue.

    PLACE TO SUBMIT

    THE FABER ACTION! PRIZE

    Faber launches the Action! Prize in direct response to research from the National Literacy Trust that reveals children’s reading enjoyment is at its lowest level in almost two decades, and that the problem is most acute for boys.

    The prize will be launched in conjunction with Literary Manager and Film/TV Producer Eddie Gamarra, who will be judging the prize alongside Kieran Larwood, author of the World of Podkin One-Ear series, and with the support of EmpathyLab.

    The Action! Prize, now open to agented and unagented writers in the UK, Ireland and US, calls for fast-paced and filmic, action-packed adventure stories, and offers a publishing contract to the three winners. Entries to the prize need to feature a diverse cast of fully rounded characters in any one of these four age bands: 7–9, 9–11, 12–14, 14+.

    Faber Publisher Leah Thaxton says:

    ‘We are all alarmed at the falling number of children reading for pleasure, especially when it comes to boys; it is clear they are not finding enough of what they need on the shelves. I’m keen we offer a much wider range of instantly appealing,...

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    20 mins
  • Don't hiss "I Love You." Dialogue tag help and also throwing tacos isn't cool
    Nov 6 2024

    A few years ago, we posted this episode about dialogue, and honestly? We're . . . um. . . burnt out because of the election and people. So, since we're already focusing on dialogue over on LIVING HAPPY, we're recycling (upcycing) this from a few years ago. Thanks for putting up with us!

    These next few podcasts, we thought we should get all nitty-gritty with some quick grammar tips or style tips for people writing fiction.

    It can help you nonfiction writers, too, we swear.

    When you’re writing dialogue (people talking to each other), you’re going to want to follow these punctuation rules.

    • Use quotes.
    • Have the dialogue tag (who the speaker is, the he said/she asked) in the actual same paragraph as the dialogue.
    • Punctuate it all correctly. (That’s a lot of knowledge right there.)

    But here’s the big one:

    Don’t go screwing around with those dialogue tags, also known as speaker tags.

    You want to keep it simple when it’s a dialogue tag.

    “Said” and “asked” are your besties here. If you do anything else? You look like a crappy writer who is trying too hard and the tag becomes more attention-grabbing than the very important words your character said.

    “I love you,” she said reads a lot differently than “I love you,” she murmured and bellowed and hissed.

    That can be your intention, but you don’t want to keep doing it all the time.

    Here look at it.

    “I love you,” she murmured.

    “I love you,” he cat-called.

    “I know,” she bellowed.

    He screamed, “Of course you do.”

    “And what do you mean by that?” she enthused.

    So, the other big thing to remember is this: You can’t sigh out or smile out words, so don’t use them for speaker tags. You can use them for dialogue beats, but that means you have to punctuate them differently.

    “I love you,” she said. – Requires a comma after the word ‘you,’ and a lower-case S for ‘she.’

    “I love you.” She sighed. – Requires a period after the word ‘you,’ and an upper-case S for ‘she.’

    Oh, and romance and horror writers, we all love to make our characters hiss especially when our lovers are shapeshifters, but you can’t hiss out a bunch of words if there are no s-sounds.

    WRITING TIPS OF THE POD

    Make sure your reader knows who is speaking by putting the dialogue tag next to the dialogue.

    DOG TIP FOR LIFE

    Only call attention to the things you want to call attention to.

    In the Mood to Randomly Buy Us Coffee or the dogs some treats? Click here AND SEND US A $1. Earn a Shout-out on the podcast, too!

    SHOUT OUT!

    The music we’ve clipped and shortened in this podcast is awesome and is made available through the Creative Commons License.

    Here’s a link to that and the artist’s website. Who is this artist and what is this song? It’s “Summer Spliff” by Broke For Free.

    WE HAVE EXTRA CONTENT ALL ABOUT LIVING HAPPY OVER HERE! It’s pretty awesome.

    Carrie is reading one of her raw poems every once in awhile on CARRIE DOES POEMS. And there you go! Whew! That’s a lot!

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    20 mins
  • Do You Need a Beta Reader? Also, Georgia Police Say Don't Copulate Outside McDonalds.
    Oct 29 2024

    So, in the world of writing, everyone talks about needing a beta reader and a critique partner.

    Everyone that is, except Carrie, who has trust issues and survives as a lonely, isolated writer in Maine.

    What is a beta reader?

    It's that person who reads your story, gives you some mild suggestions that feel like a big hug. This is a person you want to party with, a person you can cry to, a person with no mean judgement. This person is basically the human equivalent of your dog: loyal, helpful, good and they give you advice.

    What is a critique partner?

    These awesome people help you feel less alone, they share stories and ideas with you. They see your story piece by piece, usually, and they help you find the flaws in this work-in-process. These people are like your life partner. They see you without make-up. They see you vomiting into the porcelain pig of your creativity and they hold up your hair because nobody wants puke in hair.

    Do you need beta readers?

    According to everyone else in the world, yes.

    But remember they aren’t an editor. They aren’t a critique partner. They aren’t your dad. They are just someone who gives you feedback.

    There’s a great article on beta readers in The Write Practice that goes, “You might not want to hear this, but there is something wrong with your book.

    “Hear me out. You know how you can read the same page twenty times and then someone comes along and points out a typo? Yep. We've all been there.

    “The same thing can happen with major issues in your book. Things like inconsistencies in world-building, character description, plot lines, and even misplaced objects in the story can throw your readers out of your book and confuse the heck out of them.

    “One of my beta readers caught the fact that I had my characters shackled and then a couple of paragraphs later, they were swinging fists and fighting. Where did the shackles go? Good question, dear beta reader.”

    And that is why beta readers are great. You want them to be honest, to actually give you feedback, and to read in the genre your story is in and point out in a nice and gentle loving way about inconsistencies.

    Ignore everything else Shaun says in this podcast.

    DOG TIP FOR LIFE

    Dog Tip For Life - Don't be afraid of showing us the messy, disgusting, less-than-perfect aspects of your process. We can love you no matter what.

    Life Tip Of the Pod - Pick your critique partners carefully, man. Seriously. Pick someone who wants to stay up with you rather than pull you down.

    RANDOM THOUGHT LINK

    It’s here.

    SHOUT OUT!

    The music we’ve clipped and shortened in this podcast is awesome and is made available through the Creative Commons License.

    Here’s a link to that and the artist’s website. Who is this artist and what is this song? It’s “Summer Spliff” by Broke For Free.

    WE HAVE EXTRA CONTENT ALL ABOUT LIVING HAPPY OVER HERE! It's pretty awesome.

    We have a podcast, LOVING THE STRANGE, which we stream biweekly live on Carrie’s Facebook and Twitter and YouTube on Fridays. Her Facebook and Twitter handles are all carriejonesbooks or carriejonesbook.

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    12 mins

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