What books would you recommend to someone looking for good dialogues?
>>9980979
Who the fuck do you think?
>>9981005
>autist takes down ridiculous strawmen and is utterly incapable of just getting that some people are nominalists and have good reasons for it outside of the context of ridiculous strawmen: the collected works
Huehuehue
>>9981005
lold
>>9980979Bakemonogatari
>>9980979
/lit/ doesn't read
picture of dorian gray
I am a cat
>>9980979
my diary-desu?
Waiting for Godot.
>>9982558
this.
no wonder socrates was accused of bein a sophist
>>9983419
a reason why*
sorry about that
Sometimes A Great Notion by Ken Kesey.
Crime and Punishment and The Brothers Karamazov have some great dialogues about God. I think Dostoievsky was a closeted atheist trying to convince himself and the world he was christian. Or a hardcore orthodox trying to exorcize himself
>>9980979
Ivy Compton-Burnett's.
>>9984432
Yeah, this
>>9980979
Salinger's Nine Stories, particularly A Perfect Day for Bananafish
>>9983421
Underrated post
>>9986099
This, also Franny and Zoey.
>>9980979
Chekhov's plays
my diary desu
>>9980979
ASoIaF
>>9986120
>one of the most acclaimed plays in the world
>underrated
>>9980979
you probably want plays
>>9988399
Not necessarily. It's interesting to see dialogue working well in a novel but yes, I'm more interested in the dialogues themselves, as a primary device of the writing.
Thanks for the suggestions so far, anons.
>>9980979
Planescape Torment
Dostoevsky!
Waugh has excellent dialogue.