Developing Your Literary Style
What is style, anyway; and in just what style
do you normally write ... do you know?
by D. J. Herda
President
American Society of Authors and Writers
At first glance, one might expect the word, "style," to
be difficult to define. But, like so many things taken at first
glance, that's simply not so. Take this definition of style from no
less a revered authority than The Chicago Manual of Style, itself.
"The word style means two things to an editor.
The first meaning is that implied in the title A Manual of Style.
Publishers refer to style in this sense as house style or press
style--rules regarding the mechanics of written communication ...
Authors more often think of style in its other sense, as a way of writing,
of literary expression. Editors are of course also aware of this
meaning of style when they undertake the second, nonmechanical, process of
editing."
Got that? In other words, Editors most often
think of style as how to make all of the copy they're preparing for
publication conform to certain in-house standardized formats; i.e., how to
abbreviate the 50 states ("Neb." versus "NB") when to hyphenate and when to
combine two words into one ("free-lance" versus "freelance"), when to use
numerals and when to spell out numbers ("12" versus "twelve"), and so forth.
A good example is in the word, "nonmechanical," used in the paragraph above.
While The Chicago Manual of Style chooses to make the word
non-hyphenated, the Microsoft spelling checker used to check this very
"Writing Tips" article rejects that interpretation in favor of the
hyphenated style of the word, "non-mechanical."
While that's certainly something for an author to keep
in mind when writing for a specific publication (editors are not likely to
look kindly on a manuscript where every other word needs a style change to
conform to their in-house styles), we're concerned here with the more "authorly"
use of the word, style; i.e., expression.
In that sense, I define style as something like this:
"The way in which an author chooses to put words together in order to depict
an idea or a concept."
Take a look at these two very different literary
styles. First:
"Jack, upset with himself for not having stood up to
the bully who had been goading him into a fight, chose to back down."
Second:
"Jack was upset with himself for not having had the
tenacity to stand up to his adversary. Bullies, he knew all too well,
needed to be met with the type of response that they understood best--brute
force. Only by meeting force with force (and all bullies, he realized,
used force to instill fear into the quivering hearts of their quarrel-less
quarries) could he ever hope to prevail. Yet, for one reason or
another, he wasn't up to the task, wasn't willing to respond in kind.
Or, perhaps, he had learned another way."
The first example of literary style is terse and
to-the-point. There are few wasted words. The second example is
more flowery, introspective, "literary." (Hey, use literary
alliteration such as "the quivering hearts of their quarrel-less quarries,"
and we're talking literary!) See the difference? Now the
question: what is your style?
Do you normally write short, sweet, and to-the-point?
Or are you more likely to expand upon a concept, spilling out everything in
your heart and soul into your passages? Admittedly, there are more
literary styles around than fishes in the sea. Remember our definition
... The way in which an author chooses to put words together in order to
depict an idea or a concept. Since no two people think alike, no
two people write alike (although they might write similarly).
It's important to know what your primary literary style
is so that you can project beforehand whether or not that style will be
suitable for a particular audience (most notably, book or magazine readers
and editors). If you know in advance that your literary style is not
suited to a particular market, you'll either have to pass on trying to sell
anything to that market or change your style for that particular piece
(everyone is capable of writing in different styles--see this month's "Writing
Exercise" for more on that).
Most writers breaking into print haven't yet developed
a specific style, so they emulate the style of another, more successful
writer ... it's only human nature. We want to be successful; we admire
X Writer; so we copy X Writer's style. The more to which we expose
ourselves, the more literary styles we come to admire, and the more we tend
to emulate. Finally, after copying the styles of two or ten or fifty
or five hundred authors, we evolve our literary styles into something unique
to ourselves. Still, when analyzing styles, we can see that they break
down into several very basic categories. Our primary style is either:
Terse (short and to-the-point)
Flowery (embellished with often large passages of descriptive prose)
Poetic (tending to include a great deal of rhyme and alliteration)
Stream-of-consciousness (mirroring in writing what the brain is thinking)
Journalistic (just the facts, ma'm--Who, What, When, Where, and
Why)
As writers grow in literary proficiency, they often
combine different literary styles within a single work. They may do so
to keep their readers on their toes ("Hey, this guy is deeper than I
thought!") Or they may simply be mirroring the wide diversity of
the different characters in their work. One character may speak in
dialogue that is terse and tinted with scientific techno-babble while
another may soliloquy poetic. And that's another good reason for
understanding--and being able to write in--different literary styles.
Your hard-nosed editor/reporter character shouldn't
talk in the same style as the retired school teacher of 53 years. Your
rebel-without-a-cause shouldn't speak in the same style as the career
politician.
Just how do you decide what your primary
literary style is? Take a couple of pages of your "most-you" writing,
sit down, and analyze it with the list above in mind. Go
paragraph-by-paragraph, if need be, and define each one, jotting its label
down in the margin. Then tally up the numbers. Or ask a trusted
friend to read something of yours and tell you which of the above styles he
thinks you fit into.
And remember: once you know what your primary literary
style is, and once you learn to write in other styles, you're well on your
way to being able to write anything ... for anyone!
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