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#151 |
Wizard
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Now that I've seen it in colour, I think the choice of blue makes them look too much like hyperlinks (that would be even more true if there were no quotation marks). I think I prefer the use of standard quotation marks rather than a colour.
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#152 | |
Bookmaker & Cat Slave
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Hitch |
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#153 |
Enthusiast
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Doesn't bother me at all. I haven't read a lot of McCarthy, but The Road was one of the most haunting novels I've ever read and the lack of quotation marks just worked.
Lack of quotations marks also seemed to me to make sense in E.L. Doctorow's Ragtime, another all time favorite of mine. Perhaps because it included real life historical characters and Doctorow was putting words in their mouths, the lack of quotes suggests that he wasn't quoting them exactly but just conveying a sense of what might have happened. Finally, lack of quotation marks (and paragraph breaks) is a key element of the style of Thomas Bernhard, whose novels are typically one long explosion of outrage at the world, unadulterated by punctuation other than an occasional period. It works for him. |
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#154 | |
Wizard
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#155 | |
Wizard
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The trouble is, the colour needs to be distinct enough to stand out, and as soon as it does that, it becomes too distracting/eye-blowing. |
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#156 |
Grand Sorcerer
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What is the point of putting quoted matter in color?
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#157 | |
cacoethes scribendi
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Freddy reposed on the chaise. "Dahlink," he observed, "those silk stockings drive me positively wild." Or without the quotes that, in theory, should now be redundant: Freddy reposed on the chaise. Dahlink, he observed, those silk stockings drive me positively wild. Assuming we had colour ereaders (actually the above examples are in DarkSlateGray), then this might work - although readers would need different settings to support different types of colour-blindness. Catlady, the point in source code editors is to help make relevant syntax details easily identifiable when writing and reviewing code, so I guess that could be extended to normal prose if desired, perhaps allowing colour to supplement (or even take over) the role of punctuation. I'm not convinced that it's a great idea, in prose there are other elements of the text beyond the raw syntax (attributions and layout) that contribute to the effectiveness of the existing punctuation, changing colours may distract from the effect of these elements. |
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#158 |
Wizard
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A while back in the thread, Julius Caesar wrote:
I still think I prefer standard quotation marks, though that may be because it's what I'm used to. |
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#159 |
Samurai Lizard
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I think that even if color is used to indicate spoken text quotes should also be used, despite being redundant, for the following reasons:
- To accomodate different types of ereader screens and also when printing on paper. Rather than having to have two versions of an ebook (one for color screens with colored quoted text and one for monochrome screens using quotation marks), using both will accomodate both types of screens. - Despite some variations, quotes have become a common convention for indicating spoken text. Using them with another spoken text indicator will reduce confusion among readers since colored text for quotes hasn't become a commonly accepted convention (yet). In a previous post I mentioned I mentioned that I used brackets in my own writing when indicating a character's thoughts. One of the reasons I chose those symbols is that to accomodate different types of screens, including some that can't display italics. Another reason I chose brackets is that it is a symbol that I don't use for any other purpose, making it clear that the text is a character's thoughts just like quotes clearly indicate text that a character has spoken. |
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#160 |
Grand Sorcerer
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How does text-to-speech handle coloured text?
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#161 |
Grand Sorcerer
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If you've got a perfectly good way of differentiating narrative and dialog now--quotation marks--why do you need anything else--color--to supplement or replace it?
Color certainly wouldn't help the reader tell one speaker from another, unless you want to assign each speaker a different color, but that would be beyond absurd. Color would highlight what is dialog, so you could find it, but why would you want to be able to find dialog? I've seen New Testament Bibles render all the words of Christ in red, but that's so one can find those words easily for a specific purpose. What's the purpose in your average book? |
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#162 |
cacoethes scribendi
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Think of it as an experiment. It's not just great literary authors that can play around with conventions.
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#163 |
Grand Sorcerer
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On a semi-related subject...
How do people manage to keep up with dialogue in audiobooks, or when they use TTS (or the simple act of having a story read to them) without any audible (or visual) indication of where quoted material starts/stops? |
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#164 | |
Samurai Lizard
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#165 | ||
Wizard
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Quotation marks overhanging? | Cameronpaterson | Kobo Reader | 14 | 08-12-2011 05:16 AM |
Quotation marks missing... | lestatar | Conversion | 2 | 06-11-2011 06:39 AM |
Funny looking quotation marks | Novasea | Workshop | 9 | 12-09-2010 09:30 AM |
Please help with quotation marks | Vauh | Calibre | 5 | 04-28-2010 10:15 AM |
Calibre stripping quotation marks | gxtal | Calibre | 3 | 12-15-2009 06:30 AM |