StillStunned
Mr Sticky
- Joined
- Jun 4, 2023
- Posts
- 10,964
This is an important issue, I think, and one that perhaps isn't generally considered much. It can be tempting to make your writing as lyrical as possible, but - as you note - this can distract from the substance.Some of the quotes in this thread are great -- sharp and pithy, some them are even frisson-inducing. BUT -- I actually get distracted from the narrative by well-turned prose. The minute I become conscious that I'm reading words, my brain takes over from my gonads, and the eroticism suffers.
I've always preferred "trashy" writing -- comics, the bulk of sci-fi, the Playboy fiction. I read the Olympia Reader as an early teenager, which included excepts from William Burroughs, Henry Miller, Nabokov, Marquis De Sade, and many others. At the same time, I had the semi-pornographic collection of the original Mad comics from the early 1950's (my Avatar is a tribute to Wally Wood, one of its three core artists ), and the fiction in my brother's Playboy and Penthouse collection. That stuff aroused me far more than anything I read in that anthology.
When I tried to write a story written from the point of view of a person whose English was simple, because it was not her first language, it helped me concentrate less on the words, and more on the story and events, and it came out well (and was well-received).
Mostly I try to make the prose serve the story. I use techniques like alliteration and rhythm to make certain words stand out in the reader's mind, while their eyes glide over the rest and absorb the story without thinking about it much.
But when I deliberately went for lyrical prose - in Upstream - it got loads of comments about how beautiful it was. Then again, there's not much of a story there, and I don't think I'd use that style again for anything that's more plot-driven.
