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- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Path: sparky!uunet!srg!spica!dpipes
- From: dpipes@spica.srg (Dave Pipes x4552)
- Subject: Re: speech interruption
- Organization: just me
- Date: Mon, 23 Nov 92 18:24:47 GMT
- Message-ID: <1992Nov23.182447.29317@srg.srg.af.mil>
- Followup-To: misc.writing
- References: <Nov22.230654.45607@yuma.ACNS.ColoState.EDU>
- Sender: news@srg.srg.af.mil (Usenet news user)
- Lines: 37
-
- In article <Nov22.230654.45607@yuma.ACNS.ColoState.EDU> randal@pylon.physics.colostate.edu (randal rheinheimer) writes:
- >I've come across a problem in my all-too-amateurish writing and am asking those
- >more experienced (or just more imaginative) for help. There is a certain flow
- >I wish to maintain in putting a thought or a description inside a spoken
- >sentence, but no particular construction seems right to me. Here is an example
- >of the sort of thing I'm working with:
- >
- >She said, "I'm posting you about my problem--" Her hands became clumsy on the
- >keyboard. "--and I hope you're able to help me."
- >
- >That's the best construction I had come up with, so I knew that it was past
- >time to get help; it's just not right to put a complete sentence in the middle
- >of the spoken phrase. Possibly the dashes could be placed outside the
- >quotation marks:
- >
- > . . problem," --her hands became clumsy on the keyboard-- "and . . .
- >
- >A large part of the problem is that the flow, the feel of the passage is
- >destroyed if I put the description somewhere more convenient. Any
- >ideas--parentheses, maybe?
-
- What about just interposing a phrase, more like an image, to give the reader
- the effect of a glance:
-
- She said, "I'm posting you about my problem--" (clumsy hands fumbled the
- keys) "--and I hope you're able to help me".
-
- Hmmm...doesn't look as good on the screen as I had hoped. Maybe use your
- first version, with a few small changes:
-
- She said, "I'm posting you about this problem" - her hands became clumsy
- on the keyboard - "and I hope you're able to help me".
-
- This is a bit better at creating the speech embedded in a sentence feeling,
- rather than the more awkward interposed phrase. Opinions?
-
- David Pipes
-