Let Actions Contradict Words
What characters do versus what they say reveals truth.
- Why it worksActions bypass self-deception. In Normal People, Sally Rooney shows Connell saying he doesn’t care while checking his phone obsessively. The contradiction tells readers everything. In The Song of Achilles, Madeline Miller has Achilles claim indifference while his body language screams otherwise.
- How to do itLet characters lie to themselves and each other. Show the truth through behavior. In Red, White & Royal Blue, Casey McQuiston has Alex insist he’s not interested while doing everything possible to stay near Henry. The gap between his words and actions creates tension.
Do
Trust readers to spot contradictions.
Avoid
Having characters acknowledge the contradiction themselves.
From My Work
In Salt & Bone, Jack claims he’s fine while his actions say otherwise:
I checked the chain on the bay door. Tugged it once. Twice. Still locked.
Walked around the back. The alley smelled like piss and antifreeze.
I gripped the wrench in my hand tighter. Heart throbbing in my neck.
Jack doesn’t say “I’m terrified something happened to Silas.” He checks locks, walks around buildings, and grips a wrench until his knuckles hurt. The subtext is louder than any statement.
Use Silence as Response
What characters don’t say speaks volumes.
- Why it worksSilence forces readers to infer emotion. In The Remains of the Day, Kazuo Ishiguro builds entire scenes around what the butler Stevens refuses to say. The silence reveals more than confession ever could.
- How to do itLet characters leave things unsaid during crucial moments. In We Are Okay, Nina LaCour uses what Marin doesn’t tell Hannah to create devastating emotional weight. The withheld truth becomes the story’s spine.
Do
Give characters reasons to stay silent—fear, shame, love, self-protection.
Avoid
Breaking silence with exposition explaining why they were quiet.
From My Work
In The Death of Me, Katie watches her parents with their new children:
There were nights when I would lie alone in bed, hoping they’d never get over it. And those were the nights I’d cry myself to sleep.
That’s not who I was. What kind of person wishes her parents would never be happy again after the death of their child?
Katie doesn’t say this to anyone. She doesn’t confess it. The thought exists in silence, making it more powerful because it’s something she can barely admit to herself.
Let Context Shift Meaning
The same words mean different things depending on situation.
- Why it worksContext creates layers. In Station Eleven, Emily St. John Mandel uses “I remember damage” as both casual observation and devastating confession depending on when it appears. The phrase accumulates meaning.
- How to do itRepeat phrases in different contexts to show evolution. In The Goldfinch, Donna Tartt has Theo repeat “It is what it is” throughout—casual early on, weighted with resignation later. Same words, different subtext.
Do
Let repeated phrases gather emotional baggage.
Avoid
Explaining how the meaning has changed.
Show Emotional Avoidance
Characters who change subjects reveal what they can’t face.
- Why it worksDeflection is authentic human behavior. In Little Fires Everywhere, Celeste Ng shows characters pivoting away from uncomfortable topics. The avoidance patterns tell readers exactly what hurts.
- How to do itLet characters redirect conversations when they get close to painful subjects. In The Great Believers, Rebecca Makkai has characters switch topics mid-sentence when grief threatens. The evasion speaks louder than acknowledgment.
Do
Track what characters consistently avoid discussing.
Avoid
Having other characters call out the avoidance immediately.
From My Work
In The Death of My First Assignment, Serena deflects when confronted:
“Your Life List said you wanted to travel, so I’m taking you traveling.”
“How’d you know about my Life List?”
She doesn’t answer the question. She changes the subject, revealing that she’s hiding something without stating it directly.
Use Incomplete Sentences
Trailing off shows characters thinking better of speaking.
- Why it worksIncomplete thoughts mimic real hesitation. In On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous, Ocean Vuong uses fragments and interrupted sentences to show the narrator grappling with unspeakable trauma. What he doesn’t finish becomes the story.
- How to do itLet characters start sentences they don’t complete, especially during emotional moments. In Such a Fun Age, Kiley Reid shows Emira beginning and abandoning sentences when discussing race. The incompletion reveals her careful navigation.
Do
Leave thoughts unfinished when characters self-censor.
Avoid
Completing the thought in narration immediately after.
From My Work
In The Death of Me, Katie hesitates when confronted:
“I… Martin…you…stopped me from…”
“Katie? You okay?” he asked again.
She can’t finish the sentence because she doesn’t understand what just happened. The fragments reveal her confusion without stating “I’m confused.”
Let Tension Build Through Unspoken Agreement
Characters who understand each other without speaking create intimacy.
- Why it worksShared understanding shows history. In The Heart’s Invisible Furies, John Boyne shows decades of friendship through increasingly minimal dialogue. What goes unsaid proves how well characters know each other.
- How to do itReduce dialogue in long-term relationships while maintaining communication. In Pachinko, Min Jin Lee shows family members coordinating complex plans with single words because their shared history provides context.
Do
Let close relationships function with minimal verbal communication.
Avoid
Explaining the unspoken understanding to readers.
From My Work
In Salt & Bone, Jack and Lisa coordinate without discussion during crisis:
“Do you think there are any of them inside?”
“No way. I blocked us in tight.”
“Then where’s the other exit?”
The man outside slammed a final time—and the window broke.
“Okay. Time to go.” Jack grabbed my hand, and we ran.
They don’t discuss escape plans. They don’t strategize. They both know—the urgency creates instant understanding.
Reveal Through Physical Response
Bodies betray what mouths won’t say.
- Why it worksPhysical reactions are involuntary. In The Vanishing Half, Brit Bennett shows characters’ bodies revealing truths they deny verbally. Hands shake. Voices crack. The body speaks subtext.
- How to do itShow physiological responses that contradict dialogue. In Educated, Tara Westover describes physical symptoms accompanying emotional denial. The body remembers what the mind tries to forget.
Do
Use physical reactions to show emotional truth.
Avoid
Characters noticing and commenting on their own physical responses.
From My Work
In The Death of My First Assignment, Martin’s memories surface physically:
Blood trickled down the side of her face, pooling in a tiny river down my dress pants. She was dying, and there was nothing I could do.
Her hand clawed at my shirt, smearing dirt and sweat on the crisp, white material.
A shudder ran rampant through my muscles as I remembered her last breath.
Martin doesn’t say “I’m traumatized.” His body shudders. The physical response carries the emotional weight.
Final Thoughts
Subtext emerges when actions contradict words, silence becomes response, context shifts meaning, characters avoid emotional topics, sentences remain incomplete, unspoken agreements reveal intimacy, and bodies betray hidden feelings.
Readers stop feeling lectured about emotion. They become active participants, reading between lines and understanding depths characters themselves might not recognize. The story lives in the gaps between what’s said and what’s meant.
That’s when dialogue stops being exposition—and that’s when subtext becomes the real story.
Extras
- Read about Salt & Bone
- Read about The Death of Me
- Read about The Death of My First Assignment
- Sign up for the newsletter to get weekly tips
- Normal People by Sally Rooney
- The Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller
- Red, White & Royal Blue by Casey McQuiston
- The Remains of the Day by Kazuo Ishiguro
- We Are Okay by Nina LaCour
- Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel
- The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt
- Little Fires Everywhere by Celeste Ng
- The Great Believers by Rebecca Makkai
- On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous by Ocean Vuong
- Such a Fun Age by Kiley Reid
- The Heart’s Invisible Furies by John Boyne
- Pachinko by Min Jin Lee
- The Vanishing Half by Brit Bennett
- Educated by Tara Westover