Eva Marie Everson wrote on my manuscript at last year's BRMW (Blue Ridge Mtn Writer's ) conference, "I like your writing style." Colleen Coble said the same thing. What exactly is my style?
I've heard discussions where writers were trying to write in the style of so and so. I read the work. Their words did not sound like the famous author's words, they sounded like the writer's.
I'm not sure exactly what my "style" is. I just write to ear. If it sounds right, it sounds right. I'm not a flowery writer, though I do appreciate a pretty line. I like one word sentences and sentences set off in their own paragraph for drama.
I suppose those things comprise my style.
I love the way Stephen King writes. I study him, not to write like him, but to see how he pulls off his down to earth story-telling. I don't write like him, but I think he has influenced my style.
In the past few years, I've discovered Francine Rivers. When I read Redeeming Love, I snapped the book shut and said, "That's how I want to write!" She's amazing.
I study her novels. But, I don't write like her. Though, she influences my style.
So does Frank Peretti, Alton Gansky, and many others.
I don't conciously try to duplicate any of these writers. I think if I tried, it would come across as a cheap copy.
I wonder if style is something that can be taught. I don't know. I suspect not entirely. If I sat down to write like my friend Cindy, I might could pull off a short story in a similar folksy style. Though, it would be incredibly draining. Like paddling against the tide. And, I suspect, my own style would creep in. Those one word sentences, similes, etc.
Is "style" the same thing as "voice"? I hear about writer's trying to find their voice. I think when I was writing, Saving Eden, I was still searching for mine. But, while writing The Demon Chaser, I've became comfortable with my style, falling into it like a favorite pair of jeans. I stopped trying to squish my big butt into a new pair of Tommy Hilfigers that were too tight and tossed them aside, for my broken in Levi's.
I'm getting comfortable in my own literary skin and that feels good. I'm not Alton Gansky, or Francine Rivers, or Stephen King. I'm Gina Holmes. I may never pull off a story the way those writers have, but I will pull off my own story in my own voice, in my own jeans.
Wednesday, August 24, 2005
Home »
» What's Your Style: Hilfigers or Levi's?
What's Your Style: Hilfigers or Levi's?
Wednesday, August 24, 2005
2 comments
Related Posts:
Priorities—Juggling Family, Commitments and Writing by Edie Melson Normal 0 false false false EN-US JA X-NONE … Read More
Things You'll Never Hear a Writer Say Yippee! Another rejection! Think I'll pin this one. My rejection board has been looking a little sparse. Really? It's been only six months since I sent you that proposal? Gosh, I totally lost track of time. No thank… Read More
When it Gets Hard Normal 0 false false false EN-CA X-NONE X-NONE … Read More
Do You Judge a Book By Its Cover? Photo by Tom Murphy VII You know that old saying, “Don’t judge a book by its cover.” It’s an old saying that makes sense because it’s something we typically do. We DO judge books by their covers. Their covers and th… Read More
Components of a Solid First Chapter ~ by S. Dionne Moore Born and raised in Manassas, Virginia, S. Dionne Moore moved to Greencastle, PA in 1993, then to Mercersburg in 2008. Moore enjoys life in the historically rich Cumberland Valley where traffic jams are a thing of the past a… Read More
Yeah, but you can't get into the country club in your jeans. You need the Hilfigers, Gina. Have you tried another size?
ReplyDeleteI never have been country club material. Maybe I can be the lady in the bathroom that hands out the paper-towels?
ReplyDelete