Stark Reflections on Writing and Publishing

EP 312 - The Dialogue Doctor Will See You Know With Jeff Elkins

06.30.2023 - By Mark Leslie LefebvrePlay

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Mark interviews Jeff Elkins about his writing, about dialogue and character voice, about his new book The Dialogue Doctor Will See You Now, and more . . . Prior to the interview, Mark shares the winners of the complimentary tickets to BookMARCon, the surprise winners of complimentary pizza, a personal update, and a word from this episode's sponsor. You can learn more about how you can get your audiobooks distributed to retailers and library systems around the world at starkreflections.ca/Findaway. During their conversation Mark and Jeff talk about: Jeff's "nickname" as "The Dialogue Doctor" as well as his background as a writer What Jeff has seen in the past eight years that he has been involved in the indie author space The latest novel Jeff released in March 2023 co-authored with J.P. Rindfleisch called NRDS: National Recently Deceased Services which is described as "Ghostbusters meets The Office" The first collaboration Jeff had done with his best friend years ago Wanting to reengage in and looking for a way to give back to the author community in 2020 Adapting what he does professionally, training professionals in difficult conversations, and leveraging that to help authors apply those skills to their writing Doing more than 200 1:1 sessions since 2020 with authors to help them with their dialogue Liking helping writers perhaps more than he even likes writing The Dialogue Doctor community that seems to operate as a problem-solving community Jeff's book The Dialogue Doctor Will See You Now, coming July 1, 2023 The structure of the book, which is hear the problem, learn the philosophy and the strategy for fixing it, then do a reading challenge, then a writing challenge The emotional journey a character goes on and the emotional shape of stories How you can have all the right plot points but not have the right emotional journey and the reader will disconnect from it Replacing the words hero, alley, and villain with terms like vehicle (the point of view character), the engines (characters who help move them forward), the anchors (those who weigh the vehicle down or bring out the worst versions of the vehicle) If you need the character to struggle, put them in scenes with their anchor If you want a big emotional moment where the character has to make an emotional choice, have the character enacting upon the influence of the anchor, then introduce the engine into that scene How when we talk about dialogue we're really talking about overall character interaction Building a character voice and ways of building a dynamic cast around a character where they can all build upon one another The difference between segments and scenes Jeff's "Apple a day" style advice for writers And more... After the interview Mark reflects on dialogue being one important aspect of overall character interaction, the readers emotional journey, and the value in helping other authors. Links of Interest: Jeff Elkins Website The Dialogue Doctor Website Kurt Vonnegut on the Shape of Stories (YouTube) Full Kurt Vonnegut Lecture (YouTube) Findaway Voices Spotify Royalty Increase (Findaway Blog) Converting Your Audiobook From Exclusive to Non-Exclusive (Findaway Blog) BookBub Blog: Promoting Your Audiobook For Skyrocketing Sales Buy Mark a Coffee Patreon for Stark Reflections Best Book Ever Podcast Lovers Moon Podcast The Relaxed Author Buy eBook Direct Buy Audiobook Direct Publishing Pitfalls for Authors An Author's Guide to Working with Libraries & Bookstores Wide for the Win Mark's Canadian Werewolf Books This Time Around (Short Story) A Canadian Werewolf in New York Stowe Away (Novella) Fear and Longing in Los Angeles Fright Nights, Big City Lover's Moon Hex and the City The Canadian Mounted: A Trivia Guide to Planes, Trains and Automobiles   Jeff Elkins coaches authors and podcasts as the Dialogue Doctor. Since launching the Dialogue Doctor in 2020, he's held over 200 1-on-1 coaching sessions with authors focused on helping them improved their dialogue. In addition to 12 novels, Jeff is the author of The Dialogue Doctor Will See You Now: How to Write Dialogue and Characters Readers Will Love -- a primer on how to write great dialogue, dynamic character voices, and powerful casts of characters.   The introductory, end, and bumper music for this podcast (“Laser Groove”) was composed and produced by Kevin MacLeod of www.incompetech.com and is Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0

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