BWFoster78
Myth Weaver
I've seen lots of mentions of "author voice" on this forum, and, after a lot of consideration, I broke my thoughts into the following two concerns:
1. Is a distinct author voice a good thing?
When I hear the term, author voice, I think of a quality in the writing that allows the reader to identify the author. Perhaps I'm defining it wrong; if so, let me know.
If this is the case, I'm not sure this is a good thing.
My goal is to write in the voice of my character, not in my own voice. If Xan is the POV character, the writing should be cerebral, know-it-all, a bit long winded. Contrast that with Brant, who uses shorter words and is much more inclined to the physical over the mental. I want my reader to be able to pick a random paragraph from the middle of my book and know instantly who the POV character is by the voice used.
If I'm to do that, where is there room for an author voice? (Then again, looking back to my description of Xan's voice...)
To me, character voice is desirable. Author voice isn't.
Perhaps, however, most of us agree that we desire to write in the voice of the character. (History teaches me, though, that I'm a horrible judge of what most of us will agree upon.) In that case, perhaps the real perceived problem is a homogeniety of prose in which it feels like all authors, and all characters by all authors, sound the same.
I agree that's a serious issue. Ankari's general commanding Ragers shouldn't sound anything like my teenager heroine fighting supernatural monsters in modern day California.
That brings me to my second concern, though.
2. The culprit most often attributed on this forum to this perceived problem is... Rules.
I can get that, on a superficial level, it may appear that following certain rules leads to a single voice. My contention is, however, that this is, in fact, only an appearance.
To me, this is like saying: Wow, Brian and Ankari both eliminate "that" where unnecessary and only use "said" as speech tags. Their writing is completely the same.
I'll be completely honest. In my novelette, Abuse of Power, my voice differentiation between characters pretty much sucked. My editor pointed it out to me, and, even after trying to fix it, I didn't have much success.
This problem, however, had absolutely nothing to do with following rules and absolutely everything to do with my talent level at the time.
Writing is freaking hard. There is a lot to master, and I figure I'll still be working on getting better at something the day I die. For this issue, like any other, I:
1. Had the problem pointed out to me
2. Went through a denial stage where I said, "It's not really that important."
3. Accepted that, "Yes, it is that important."
4. Went to work trying to figure out how to fix the problem
5. After A LOT of work and study, got to a point where I'm happy with the results.
As to how to create a distinct character voice, rather than avoid the "rules," I came up with a new one. It's simple: Live inside your character's head. For every line from their POV, think of not how you would react and what you would see, but how that character would react, what that character would notice, what words that character would use.
That's it.
1. Is a distinct author voice a good thing?
When I hear the term, author voice, I think of a quality in the writing that allows the reader to identify the author. Perhaps I'm defining it wrong; if so, let me know.
If this is the case, I'm not sure this is a good thing.
My goal is to write in the voice of my character, not in my own voice. If Xan is the POV character, the writing should be cerebral, know-it-all, a bit long winded. Contrast that with Brant, who uses shorter words and is much more inclined to the physical over the mental. I want my reader to be able to pick a random paragraph from the middle of my book and know instantly who the POV character is by the voice used.
If I'm to do that, where is there room for an author voice? (Then again, looking back to my description of Xan's voice...)
To me, character voice is desirable. Author voice isn't.
Perhaps, however, most of us agree that we desire to write in the voice of the character. (History teaches me, though, that I'm a horrible judge of what most of us will agree upon.) In that case, perhaps the real perceived problem is a homogeniety of prose in which it feels like all authors, and all characters by all authors, sound the same.
I agree that's a serious issue. Ankari's general commanding Ragers shouldn't sound anything like my teenager heroine fighting supernatural monsters in modern day California.
That brings me to my second concern, though.
2. The culprit most often attributed on this forum to this perceived problem is... Rules.
I can get that, on a superficial level, it may appear that following certain rules leads to a single voice. My contention is, however, that this is, in fact, only an appearance.
To me, this is like saying: Wow, Brian and Ankari both eliminate "that" where unnecessary and only use "said" as speech tags. Their writing is completely the same.
I'll be completely honest. In my novelette, Abuse of Power, my voice differentiation between characters pretty much sucked. My editor pointed it out to me, and, even after trying to fix it, I didn't have much success.
This problem, however, had absolutely nothing to do with following rules and absolutely everything to do with my talent level at the time.
Writing is freaking hard. There is a lot to master, and I figure I'll still be working on getting better at something the day I die. For this issue, like any other, I:
1. Had the problem pointed out to me
2. Went through a denial stage where I said, "It's not really that important."
3. Accepted that, "Yes, it is that important."
4. Went to work trying to figure out how to fix the problem
5. After A LOT of work and study, got to a point where I'm happy with the results.
As to how to create a distinct character voice, rather than avoid the "rules," I came up with a new one. It's simple: Live inside your character's head. For every line from their POV, think of not how you would react and what you would see, but how that character would react, what that character would notice, what words that character would use.
That's it.