AG31
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Feb 19, 2021
- Posts
- 4,078
Are you aware of your style? If so, how do you describe it? Below are some specifics to help you think about what it is, and whether or not you are intentional about it.
Here is my own response: My style has been called "formal.' Someone once said, "You like a tableau." I like both those descriptions, although there's no intentionality on my part to produce these qualities. I wouldn't even know how to go about it. I do go over and over my text trying to increase the showing vs the telling, particularly focusing on the somatic... how things feel to the MC. My characters have dignity. Again, I don't have to go over the text to give them that quality, it just flows. I write in close 3rd person, and I put some effort into keeping the story focused on what the MC is experiencing, but I didn't know that's what it was called until this year sometime.
Show, don't tell. Do you comb pages of a new work, looking for places to show, not tell?
Crisp, minimalist. Do you look at each sentence, to see if there are words you can remove? Sentences, maybe?
Lyrical. Do you try to make your narrative sing?
Fully developed characters, complete with info about background, and character revealed in dialogue. Do you re-read with that in mind?
Fast paced. Do you literally count pages between plot points that move the story forward?
Characters that are entertaining, bordering on cartoonish. Stories that give pleasure because of their accessibility.
Snappy dialogue, like Spencer.
Snappy narration, like Loren Estelman. Again, if you have it, do you work at it, or does it just flow?
Vivid, meticulous description of surroundings.
Here is my own response: My style has been called "formal.' Someone once said, "You like a tableau." I like both those descriptions, although there's no intentionality on my part to produce these qualities. I wouldn't even know how to go about it. I do go over and over my text trying to increase the showing vs the telling, particularly focusing on the somatic... how things feel to the MC. My characters have dignity. Again, I don't have to go over the text to give them that quality, it just flows. I write in close 3rd person, and I put some effort into keeping the story focused on what the MC is experiencing, but I didn't know that's what it was called until this year sometime.
Show, don't tell. Do you comb pages of a new work, looking for places to show, not tell?
Crisp, minimalist. Do you look at each sentence, to see if there are words you can remove? Sentences, maybe?
Lyrical. Do you try to make your narrative sing?
Fully developed characters, complete with info about background, and character revealed in dialogue. Do you re-read with that in mind?
Fast paced. Do you literally count pages between plot points that move the story forward?
Characters that are entertaining, bordering on cartoonish. Stories that give pleasure because of their accessibility.
Snappy dialogue, like Spencer.
Snappy narration, like Loren Estelman. Again, if you have it, do you work at it, or does it just flow?
Vivid, meticulous description of surroundings.