Wednesday, 26 December 2012

Various Styles of Writing

By Ronald Wilson


Distinct writing styles can be the selling point for individual writing artists. Style is the underlying current that runs through all your writing. It's how you write, not what you write. It's the part of you that readers will learn to recognize and expect. Consider some of your favorite authors - you're usually happy to go out and purchase their new book even when you know very little about it. You know you like their style and you trust that they will perform, over and over again. They use their own unique strengths when writing a novel.

When a reader discovers a style they enjoy, they are more likely to go back over and over, and also look for other writers who share a comparable style of writing. Look for stories from established novelists who share a similar style to your own. Do you have a simple but suspenseful style like John Grisham? Or maybe a witty and educated style like Zadie Smith? Perhaps you are able to communicate to children in the way of J K Rowling, or nail a romance like Danielle Steele?

I'm not implying you should be comparable to these authors when you first begin, but by establishing the style you aim to achieve you know your outcome when it comes time for producing your book. You can model yourself on these people instead of trying to re-invent the wheel. Obviously we wouldn't just copy other writers (and this would be evident to our readers), but you can analyze the basis of their writing which gives you a good beginning point. Then you can weave your own style within.

Studying these novels regularly puts the tone into your mind. In this manner your style doesn't jump around every which way - going from intelligent and unorthodox, to romantic and powerful every turn of the page. Your readers choose your stories because they expect a particular style, don't try to showcase everything in the one go, as you will make things more difficult on them to stay tuned.

Creating your own style requires practice. By writing as often as you can ... about anything and everything ... you will develop a natural and organic style which is true to yourself. The more you write the more you will begin to see your natural tone emerging, and you will discover your strengths.

In order to emphasize your best writing, write freely and naturally in your first drafts. When writing a book always pick topics and characters that mean something to you, intellectually, or even better, emotionally. This will assure your writing is sincere, sounds true to your readers, and most importantly, highlights the very best of the creator within, as all of us have our own unique, different story styles.




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