The writerly voice is the personality of the narration.
This blog, for
example, has its own voice. A touch of angst, a sprinkle of wistfulness, and an
evident struggle with preachiness that I don’t always win.
Writing fiction is
similar in that the narration, even when not in first person, is a person of
sorts.
I have rarely gone
in the lyrical direction, but some pieces just did it anyway. I recall both my
critique groups and later my agent’s surprise to get lyrical writing from me.
Those pieces write themselves and sing that-a-way.
I’ll be honest;
the lyrical pieces feel as if they come from some other source. My everyday
writing voice has a touch of angsty attempted wit, which I hope isn’t too self-conscious.
My experience is
that the writerly voice is the same inner voice that talks/tells to self, but
more organized as writing must be.
In other words,
the voice cannot be taught but the organizational aspect can. In fact, that
mechanical/organizing craft is something you improve with practice and reading.
How your inner voice speaks, however, is innate. All you can do is shape and
polish it.
Musing on a wistful
end of fall day here.
I couldn't agree more.
ReplyDeleteAn interesting blog post. I actually have no idea what kind of writer's voice I have.
ReplyDeleteVoice--so interesting. It's literally how you speak and this is why I need silence to hear the voices of my characters but there's definitely that unique voice we each have and we can only develop it with writing lots. It's not only in our word choices, but the pauses we take. I remember as a newbie writer how I would practice writing a certain way, copying authors I admired. But in the end I had to find my own way through the woods. I love it when stories are given to me in their entirety, voice included :) Happy writing Mirka.
ReplyDeleteThe elusive yet ever present "voice". Love it. Happy Chanukah.
ReplyDeleteSuch pretty leaves! Looks like a beautiful fall day where you're at.
ReplyDeleteGood one.
ReplyDelete