@Switch Blayde
What's the difference if it was edited or not ... It even has a paragraph with action-dialogue-action-dialogue ... there's not a single dialogue tag.
The difference is that once you corrected the mistake AJ detected I can read that section without becoming confused about who is speaking. Which proves the point I wanted to make, given that you haven't needed a single dialogue tag.
@REP
PLEASE NOTE I was drafting this during a blackout at my home and I did not see your most recent post until my power came back one. This is NOT a reaction to your most recent post.
The concept I claimed is 'quite simple' is demonstrated in this section of Switch's post:
"His mother called me."
Buck's eyes widened. "Elena called you?" He scrambled to his feet. "Why'd she call you?"
"I'm an old friend. Are you a warrior?"
Note that the subject of any sentence of just dialogue is always its speaker.
It doesn't matter if the first sentence is written as
"His mother called me"
or as
"His mother called me," Steele said.
In either form, the (implied) subject of the sentence is 'Steele'.
The subject of SB's first sentence is Steele. It is implied as he is its speaker.
The subject of the next sentence is Buck. He must start a new paragraph.
The subject of the next three sentences is still Buck. He must NOT start a new paragraph.
The subject of "I'm an old friend" changes to Steele. He must start a new paragraph.
I note that when I say that 'same subject = same paragraph', it is effectively the same as when AJ says above every paragraph should have one 'principal actor'.
* * *
I think I can describe a process that automatically leads to two-person exchanges which:
1. never leave readers in any doubt about who the current speaker is, and
2. require the minimum repetitions of speakers' names and uses of 'said' or an equivalent.
As an author is writing their first drafts, they should:
* Start a new paragraph every time the subject of a sentence changes from one speaker to the other, but do not start a new paragraph because the subject of a sentence is anything else, e.g. an object.
* Do not use any speaker attributions at all.
* Avoid going too many paragraphs without naming one speaker or the other. If there's no narrative describing what is happening, sprinkle in an occasional attribution or show a simple action step.
* Use the principal actor's name the first time they are mentioned in any paragraph. After that, use pronouns.
* The minimum requirement to start a ping pong of dialogue is two consecutive paragraphs, with at least one containing dialogue, with the two speakers named in either one; the minimum requirement to end a ping pong is two consecutive paragraphs with the same principal actor named in both, or something like a paragraph where someone else is named as the principal actor.
* * *
That may well be enough to get it right first time, but there are some factors worth considering during the revision process:
* If the principal actor's name is used in a paragraph (it's not mandatory that every paragraph contains dialogue), I would want it to appear very early, if not the first word of the paragraph then almost always somewhere in the first line.
* I would not want to go more than three or four paragraphs without the name of one speaker or the other being used, even if all paragraphs are single-line statements of dialogue.
* Once a paragraph becomes quite long I probably would want to mention the principal actor's name. Alternatively, I might use the other person's name as the first word of the following paragraph, simply so that readers will not have gone too long without being reminded of who is currently speaking.
* Same care is needed when dividing a paragraph which is too long. To do that without breaking the ping pong between the speakers requires a new paragraph to be inserted with the other speaker as its principal actor. That could be as brief as either "Uh-huh." or Jack nodded. EB says he does that to divide a long speech without the need to use the despised 'dropped end-quote' convention.
* * *
@Switch, AJ, and Others
I guess we'd all expect REP to be somewhat skeptical when he reads me informing him about my revelation, albeit a very minor one. That will bother no one. :-)
I STRESS I do not believe REP makes any mistakes in what he does. If there is ANY DIFFERENCE at all if he followed the process I have described, it would merely be the need for a few less attributions.
We usually don't bother making posts when we agree with what someone else has said, only when we disagree or think something is worth adding. In this case, if you think this post contains something novel and worthwhile, would you please give it an explicit 'thumbs up'?
I think I've spotted a simple "trick" for getting ping pongs of dialogue right. It is merely to recognize that the implied subject of a sentence of just dialogue is its speaker. The "rule" is merely start a new paragraph immediately whenever the subject of a sentence changes from one speaker to the other. :-)