Difference between revisions of "Said-Bookism"

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  Are you lost daddy I arsked tenderly.
 
  Are you lost daddy I arsked tenderly.
 
  Shut up he explained.
 
  Shut up he explained.
[[James Blish]], writing under the [[penname]] [[William Atheling, Jr.]], for [[Redd Boggs]]' [[fanzine]] [[Sky Hook]] during the mid-1950s, coined the term after ''The Said Book'', the title of a booklet for aspiring writers listing countless alternatives to the word "said."
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[[James Blish]], writing under the [[penname]] [[William Atheling, Jr.]], for [[Redd Boggs]]' [[fanzine]] ''[[Sky Hook]]'' during the mid-1950s, coined the term after ''The Said Book'', the title of a booklet for aspiring writers listing countless alternatives to the word "said."
  
 
It has since crept into [[mundane]] literary criticism.  
 
It has since crept into [[mundane]] literary criticism.  
  
 
{{fanspeak|start=1950s}}
 
{{fanspeak|start=1950s}}

Revision as of 13:31, 28 June 2021

Said-Bookism, a term used in book reviews, derides the studious avoidance, in writing dialogue, of the word "said," substituting verbs such as "interjected", "huffed," "retorted" or "uttered" — and, especially, to the use of inappropriate words such as “ejaculated,” "snorted" or "giggled." It is a type of Roget's Disease.

An example of this taken to ludicrous extremes, well-loved in fandom, comes from Ring Lardner’s satirical 1920 novella “The Young Immigrunts”:

Are you lost daddy I arsked tenderly.
Shut up he explained.

James Blish, writing under the penname William Atheling, Jr., for Redd Boggs' fanzine Sky Hook during the mid-1950s, coined the term after The Said Book, the title of a booklet for aspiring writers listing countless alternatives to the word "said."

It has since crept into mundane literary criticism.


Fanspeak 1950s
This is a fanspeak page. Please extend it by adding information about when and by whom it was coined, whether it’s still in use, etc.