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Dialogue

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About This Book

An experienced novelist reflects on dialogue as the meeting of minds in talk, distinguishing it from monologue and soliloquy and stressing reciprocity, interruption, and the clash of viewpoints as its lifeblood. He surveys philosophical and comic precedents, contrasts one-sided conversational devices with fully dialogic exchanges, and praises novels where each speaker contributes a distinct perspective. He argues that dialogue advances character, drama, and concision, lets authors show rather than tell, and serves technical aims such as impartiality, secrecy, and suspense, while offering practical examples from both modern and classical literature to illustrate effective and ineffective uses.

About the Author

Hope, Anthony portrait

Anthony Hope

Anthony Hope was an English novelist and playwright, best known for his adventure novels and romantic comedies. His most notable work, "The Prisoner of Zenda," published in 1894, is a classic tale of doppelgängers and political intrigue that has inspired numerous adaptations and imitations in literature and film. Hope's writing often features themes of love, honor, and the complexities of human relationships, as seen in works like "A Change of Air" and "A Servant of the Public." Throughout his career, he contributed significantly to the genre of light fiction and remains a notable figure in Victorian literature.

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