The Killers | Style
Dialogue
Dialogue, the conversation between two or more characters, is a primary tool of characterization. Writers create characters through shaping their speech in ways that reflect their desires and motivations. In addition to physically describing Max and Al as stereotypical gangsters, Hemingway has them talk like gangsters as well. Their speech is peppered with insults, wisecracks, and slang, and they never answer a question directly. They speak like characters out of a Dashiell Hammett novel, in terse bursts. Hammett was popular for his detective stories...
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- The Killers: Introduction
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- The Killers: Ernest Hemingway Biography
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The Killers: Essays and Criticism
- Reticence and Mental Avoidance: Keys to Escape for Hemingway’s Heroes
- “The Killers’’ and “Big Two-Hearted River’’: Striving for Order in a Chaotic World
- The Code in Hemingway’s “The Killers”
- Waiting in “The Killers”
- Hemingway’s “The Killers”
- The Hit in Summit: Ernest Hemingway’s “The Killers”
- Vaudeville Philosophers: ‘‘The Killers’’
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