Friday 1 November 2013

How to mix comedy into your writing

by 
Alison Morton

Why do we laugh, giggle or grin? Or even give a little smile?

Perhaps it’s nervous relief we’re not in the other person’s dilemma and feeling their pain or maybe an instinctive reaction to being in an awkward situation ourselves. Sociologists, linguists and biologists say that our ability to laugh and desire to do so isn’t all fun and games, but actually serves two essential life functions: to bond with members of our “tribe,” and to lessen tension and anxiety. And let’s not discount wishing to look clever or impress somebody or to look like part of the cool crowd.


Unlike stand-up comedy, written humour is often subtle. Some may smile, but most people don’t laugh out loud when they’re reading. A stand-up comic has a huge advantage over writers; a comic can incorporate facial expressions, body language, gestures, and vocal inflections to reinforce their delivery. Writers only have wit, words, and the rhythm of the language. But if well-written, humour enhances how much we like what we’re reading and how well we remember it afterwards.

So how can writers do this?

Juxtaposition - Dragons getting smashed out of their minds and flying with a hangover the next morning, the tarty-looking girl speaking with an upper crust accent, a trucker quoting Hamlet.

Timing – As important on the written page as in stand-up. Don’t let the joke, witty remark fall into the scene until the end; string it out as long as you dare, but don’t let it lose its snappiness. Remember how effective punch lines are. And try to arrange the sentence so that the funny word or phrase falls at the end. If it’s the last thing readers see, a funny sounding word strengthens the memory of the joke in their mind.

Characterisation - Remember your characters are real people and why people use comedy in real life. This will round out your characters, make them far more human and let the reader connect with them more easily. Nobody likes poker-faced, hundred per cent driven and serious people – they’re rather boring…

Appropriateness and tone – Is your story the place for dry humour, wittiness, exaggeration, euphemism, understatement, knockabout, sarcasm or misdirected dialogue? Decide on the comic tone appropriate to your characters and, importantly, to your reading audience.

Integration – Weave the humour into the dialogue, speech tags, description and thoughts. Make it reveal something about the characters or push the story forward. These four lines immediately build an impression of the characters and their relationship, then lead to the next scene with anticipation of danger.

Crafty bastard. I gave him a dirty look. Lurio would never let me forget it if I gave in now. I also wanted to have the edge over Conrad.

‘You know full well I’ll do it,’ I grumped. ‘Just don’t get me killed.’

Lurio laughed. I smiled back in a sour way.

(Extract from INCEPTIO)
Avoiding author interference - Let the characters and situations be funny, don't try and inject ‘funny’ e.g. ‘he laughed uproariously’. Use reaction in others as one of the main reflectors of the humour, e.g. how a wittier person reacts to the words of somebody suffering from a humour bypass, such as Lizzie’s reaction to Mr Collins in Pride and Prejudice.



Hard sounds are funny – It’s an old cliché, but comedy writers as a rule don’t search their brains for ‘K’, ‘G’ or ‘C’ sound words to end their jokes, but their minds instinctively choose words with those consonants. What’s not funny about ‘pumperknickel’ or ‘chicken’?

Don’t fall into the ‘joke first, scene afterwards’ trap – Tempting as it is, don’t wrap your scene around the hysteria-inducing joke you’ve thought up. Readers will spot that one. Let the humour arise naturally out of the scene’s action. If there isn’t anything funny, then fine. On to the next scene…

When to use humour and comedy?


If you are writing a rom-com, comedy is integral. If your story is a saga or a relationship-based contemporary novel, then wry humour or a laugh to relieve an embarrassing situation will engage readers even more. Sci-fi and historical work can vary as much as any genre from the witty male buddy-to-buddy, master/mistress to servant/robot, girl-to-girl banter to full-on insanity at every level (Thinking of Hitchhiker’s Guide and Discworld here).

Crime, thrillers and mystery are different as the grim events, whether written in a gritty or cosy style, need some relief as do the characters in them.

In my own Roma Nova series, kidnapping, attempted murder, psychotic villains, rebellion and heartache are balanced by my heroine’s tone; historic novelist Simon Scarrow, called it ‘a winning dry sense of humour’ when he endorsed the second in series, PERFIDITAS. Raised in the States, but forced to flee to Europe in the earlier novel, INCEPTIO, Karen has used her humour to keep herself secure and stable after a difficult childhood and adolescence. In both these books, her character voice is distinct by the use of her down to earth attitude and humorous remarks.

Of course, wonderful jokes and exciting, original humour or comedy can’t carry a book on their own; the underlying story must be solid and strong. Above all, it must be tightly-edited. As the Prince of Denmark said, ‘Brevity is the soul of wit’.

Happy writing!
Introducing...

Perfiditas
 second in the series of Roma Nova thrillers 

Amazon.US
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Captain Carina Mitela of the Praetorian Guard Special Forces is in trouble – one colleague has tried to kill her and another has set a trap to incriminate her in a conspiracy to topple the government of Roma Nova. Founded sixteen hundred years ago by Roman dissidents and ruled by women, Roma Nova barely survived a devastating coup d’état thirty years ago. Carina swears to prevent a repeat and not merely for love of country. 



Seeking help from a not quite legal old friend could wreck her marriage to the enigmatic Conrad. Once proscribed and operating illegally, she risks being terminated by both security services and conspirators. As she struggles to overcome the desperate odds and save her beloved Roma Nova and her own life, she faces the ultimate betrayal… 


“Sassy, intriguing, page-turning… Roma Nova is a fascinating world” - Simon Scarrow

Alison Morton grew up in Tunbridge Wells, a former spa town in South East England, and worked in the City of London, dealt in coins and antique jewellery, head-hunted chief executives, served as a reserve military officer and owned a translation company. She completed a bachelor’s degree in French, German and Economics and several years later a masters’ in history. She now lives in France with her husband.

A ‘Roman nut’ since age 11, she has visited sites throughout Europe including the alma mater, Rome. But it was the mosaics at Ampurias (Spain) that started her wondering what a modern Roman society would be like if run by women…

A wordsmith much of her life - playwright (aged 7), article writer, local magazine editor and translator - she came to novel writing in reaction to a particularly dire film.

‘I could do better that that,’ she whispered in the darkened cinema.

‘So why don’t you?’ came her spouse’s reply.

Three months later, she had completed the first draft of INCEPTIO, the first in her series of Roma Nova thrillers.



INCEPTIO was shortlisted for the 2013 International Rubery Book Award and awarded a B.R.A.G. MedallionTM in September 2013. The next in the series, PERFIDITAS, was published October 2013. Alison is working on the third book SUCCESSIO.



8 comments:

  1. I'm not an author but it's intersting reading about the hows and whys of book writing. Never thought about it closely before.
    Thank you.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks for reading, Kathy. Yes, it's interesting to read about the nuts and bolts of putting a novel together.

    ReplyDelete
  3. There's a lot of truth in the saying it's 1% inspiration and 99% perspiration.

    Glad you enjoyed the post, Kathy.

    ReplyDelete
  4. As I'm an 'aspiring' novelist this is interesting. I'm trying to write a romantic comedy (don't like the name chick lit) but with a sensible theme so it's not going to be like the norm.

    Thanks for posting!!!
    x

    ReplyDelete
  5. A pleasure, Jane. Wry,dry wit can be very effective in the most difficult scenes.

    Good luck with your book!

    ReplyDelete
  6. I'm dying to read your ms, Jane! You've been promising me a peek for a long, long time.

    Alison: Thanks for your inspirational words. Much appreciated. :)

    ReplyDelete
  7. Thanks for having me on your blog, Louise. Off to start overhauling the draft of the next book!

    ReplyDelete

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