Wednesday, June 3, 2015

Voice

Paula’s thoughts about what constitutes a writer’s ‘voice’.

Agents and Editors are often quoted as saying, “I am looking for authors with a distinctive voice.”

In response, I want to say, “Every author has a distinctive voice.” At its very basic, a writer’s voice can be simply the writer’s way of putting words together, the flow of their sentences, and the vocabulary they use. But it’s more than that. Each of us has a unique personality, which combined with background, experiences, beliefs, and outlook, can influence how we write, and give us our distinctive voices.

Authors have ‘voices’ that are as different as musical instruments – one may be a flute, another a bassoon. Even an individual author can have several voices – you write a letter to your lawyer in a different voice from a letter to your lover (at least, I hope you do!). In the same way, your ‘voice’ in a blog like this is different from your voice in a romance novel.

Would-be writers sometimes ask how they can ‘find’ their voice, or even how do they know if they’ve found it. Some beginners think they have to ‘sound’ like a writer, so they may pore through the thesaurus searching for fancy alternatives for ordinary words, or write long sentences with flowery descriptions. In doing so, they’re in danger of losing their own natural ‘voice’.

I’ve also heard and seen advice about studying other writers’ styles in order to ‘find’ your own voice, and while I would agree that you can absorb certain things from reading, I would maintain that a writer’s voice isn’t something that can be learned (or copied) from others; on the contrary, it’s already there within your writing. I like to think of it as writing from the heart, from the hidden depths of the inner ‘you’.

In a website about writing for children (Write4kids), I found this paragraph, which I think applies to all books, not just children’s books:
The elements of a book -- the plot, characters, setting, description -- are all important, but alone they make up the bare bones. With a voice, a book becomes more than words on a page; it becomes a story. The writer's voice breathes life into a book and gives it a soul.

6 comments:

  1. I think (so far) that an author's voice gains potency over time, with practice, with confidence. It's like style. Some people are naturally comfortable in their own skin and with how they dress and look. Other people need time to find their "look."

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    1. I agree, Ana. Even though I cringe at my very early novels, I can still see element of my 'voice' in them, but I know it's stronger now. It's also changed during the past five year (as I discovered when I was editing 'His Leading Lady' for re-publication)

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  2. I love the comparison of voice to the soul of a book. There are only so many 'stories' out there, and it's up to individual authors to make them unique and their own. A huge part of that is voice.

    And I would agree that voice isn't something you can learn.

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    1. You're right that our voice is the thing can make our stories unique because somehow it goes deeper than just our style of writing.

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  3. I love that quote! And I agree each voice is unique and can't be learned, although it can be improved.

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    1. I think we improve/strengthen our 'voice' with each book that we write.

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