: Do I quote this, italicize, or something else? The sentence is: “Where do you want these?†Jon’s publisher asked, bobbling a box with the word books scrawled across the side. What do I
The sentence is:
“Where do you want these?†Jon’s publisher asked, bobbling a box with the word books scrawled across the side.
What do I do with the word, "books"?
Do I quote it (as above)?
Should I italicize it?
Is there a rule here or is it predominantly an issue of style and/or author preference?
What do you think?
More posts by @Pope4766717
: How to avoid slipping into fault-finding when reading? Ever since I started taking my writing seriously, I have had trouble getting immersed in books. Every reading session devolves into analyzing
: I think that it might work if you switched tense at a large break in the story, such as a chapter. This would especially work well if you were switching the POV character. A friend in
2 Comments
Sorted by latest first Latest Oldest Best
I agree with @Lauren Ipsum that it is a matter of preference/style, but I disagree with her preference. I prefer the quotes:
“Where do you want these?†Jon’s publisher asked, bobbling a box with the word “books†scrawled across the side.
I feel that it is comparable to quoting what the box has said:
The senator said, “guilty.â€
The box said, “books.â€
I think it's author preference. Either of these would be okay:
“Where do you want these?†Jon’s publisher asked, bobbling a box with the word “books†scrawled across the side.
“Where do you want these?†Jon’s publisher asked, bobbling a box with the word books scrawled across the side.
I would use the italics, but it's purely a preference, not a rule.
Terms of Use Privacy policy Contact About Cancellation policy © selfpublishingguru.com2024 All Rights reserved.