Your Author Voice

Many writers, especially those just beginning to write fiction, worry about how to develop their author voice. You may have read that this “voice” is very important in literature and may even make the difference of whether you get published by a traditional publisher, which tends to be every novice writer’s wish.

But unlike learning how to write good dialogue or description or some other aspect of the writing craft, author voice is something that evolves over time and cannot be learned from a book, a course, or a workshop.

But what is author voice? you ask in search of the meaning of this nebulous term.

Some students of literature (aka literary experts) equate author voice with style; others consider the two to be separate though closely related.

Jeanne Cavelos, who served as a senior editor at Bantam Doubleday Dell where she ran the Abyss horror imprint before becoming a bestselling science fiction author, says in the chapter titled “Innovation in Horror” [The Complete Handbook of Novel Writing, Writer’s Digest Books © 2002], that your writing style, which she also calls “your voice,” is a reflection of your personality and that your voice is influenced by your beliefs and by “your concerns,” or what matters most to you in life. She adds that by writing, you are commenting on “the human condition.”

Novelist Deborah Ratliff, on the other hand, in her blog article “The Writer’s Voice and Other Elements of Style” [The Coastal Quill: November 11, 2016], says that author voice is one of the three elements that make up a writer’s style, the others being sentence structure and word choice. Each writer has a unique voice, she adds, and that voice derives from the writer’s personality and is impacted by that writer’s choice of words.

I like to think of it this way: what you write is your story, how you write it is your style, and the intellect and personality behind all that is your voice.

To my way of thinking, your voice dictates your style, not the other way around. And yet, the style you use may be different in different stories you write even though you are the same author for those various works. In other words, your author voice is something separate from your normal, real-life persona.

Regardless of whether you use a serious or humorous tone in your story or write in a languid literary or a hard-boiled detective style, your voice will be shaped by your true personality, which has been formed by your socio-economic and cultural upbringing, your education, your life experiences, and your philosophical beliefs.

I suppose the bottom line here is that there is no need to worry about your author voice. Even if you don’t know it, you already have one. And the more you write, the more you think, and the more you live, the stronger and more individually recognizable your voice will become.

So, if you want to improve your writing, forget about your voice and concentrate on your craft.

Happy writing!

© 2020 Ann Henry, all rights reserved.

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