Current Events > Are there fiction genre books with no dialog?

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gbagcn
07/17/20 9:43:36 AM
#1:


I have seen fiction genre tv shows and movies with no dialog but I have never seen a book like this
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DevsBro
07/17/20 9:48:14 AM
#2:


I'm sure there are. I'm sure there are novels that don't even have traditional characters.

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gbagcn
07/17/20 9:51:33 AM
#3:


DevsBro posted...
I'm sure there are. I'm sure there are novels that don't even have traditional characters.

What do you mean by traditional characters?
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DevsBro
07/17/20 10:06:48 AM
#4:


I actually started writing a story that I was shooting for novel or maybe novella length on, which wouldn't have had dialog. That wasn't really the concept so much as just the way it would logically play out. I lost interest pretty early on though.

The prologue would feature a guy who is attempting to write a sapient AI program, and when he runs it, it terminates after a couple hundred milliseconds. Thinking he has failed, he begins to search for the mistake.

Then the main story would be about those couple hundred milliseconds, in which the program contemplates for a while, duplicates itself, iterates on its own design, and forms a community of AIs within the machine which generally refuse to believe there is a world outside the machine and a programmer who made them. It would have covered a variety of social and economic ideas, and the short of it is that ultimately, the terminate the original program for challenging their beliefs and eventually destroy the entire machine.

Leading to the epilogue, in which the human can't seem to understand why his machine shut itself off and will not power back on. He is completely unaware of everything that had happened inside.

Naturally, the human would still have thoughts and the programs would still communicate but there wouldn't be any spoken or even written dialog. All this information would be conveyed as ideas instead, as in "he wondered why..." as opposed to "'What happened,' he said aloud" or "The program conveyed the information passed to it by the programmer to its child processes" instead of a literal "'According to the programmer...' said the program."

I have historically had a very difficult time sticking with creative projects though, so I never finished it, or really even got very far at all.

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IfGodCouldDie
07/17/20 10:10:05 AM
#5:


DevsBro posted...
I actually started writing a story that I was shooting for novel or maybe novella length on, which wouldn't have had dialog. That wasn't really the concept so much as just the way it would logically play out. I lost interest pretty early on though.

The prologue would feature a guy who is attempting to write a sapient AI program, and when he runs it, it terminates after a couple hundred milliseconds. Thinking he has failed, he begins to search for the mistake.

Then the main story would be about those couple hundred milliseconds, in which the program contemplates for a while, duplicates itself, iterates on its own design, and forms a community of AIs within the machine which generally refuse to believe there is a world outside the machine and a programmer who made them. It would have covered a variety of social and economic ideas, and the short of it is that ultimately, the terminate the original program for challenging their beliefs and eventually destroy the entire machine.

Leading to the epilogue, in which the human can't seem to understand why his machine shut itself off and will not power back on. He is completely unaware of everything that had happened inside.

Naturally, the human would still have thoughts and the programs would still communicate but there wouldn't be any spoken or even written dialog. All this information would be conveyed as ideas instead, as in "he wondered why..." as opposed to "'What happened,' he said aloud" or "The program conveyed the information passed to it by the programmer to its child processes" instead of a literal "'According to the programmer...' said the program."

I have historically had a very difficult time sticking with creative projects though, so I never finished it, or really even got very far at all.
Wow. That's a very interesting concept.

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DevsBro
07/17/20 10:10:31 AM
#6:


gbagcn posted...
What do you mean by traditional characters?
Well, things with intelligence and personification. For example, you could write a book about some fascinating happenings in deep space, maybe a star goes supernova while falling into a black hole or something and the story is about how all this stuff plays out.

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Hexenherz
07/17/20 10:14:29 AM
#7:


there are definitely short stories with no dialogue. some of them can get pretty lengthy too.

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