StillStunned
Monsieur le Chat
- Joined
- Jun 4, 2023
- Posts
- 12,904
It seems to be common advice to new writers: read! The more you read, the better your writing will be. Or perhaps the less you read, the more limited your writing will be. I've sometimes told people to reread their favourite books and try to emulate the style, or the bits they enjoyed most.
"But won't my writing be derivative?"
Only if it's bad. And let's face it: if you need to be told to emulate your favourite authors, you probably haven't discovered your voice yet. That comes from writing, and writing some more, and then writing a bit more. But you have to start somewhere, and it probably helps to start from a specific place, particularly if it's a place you enjoy.
But even for us old grognards of the hobby, it's important to keep reading. I won't say we have to keep up with modern trends, but I don't think there's really a downside to absorbing as many possible styles and techniques and tricks as we can. For my sword & sorcery stories, my model is RE Howard. The Countesses of Tannensdal draws heavily on the style of Georgette Heyer's Regency romances, and more indirectly Jane Austen's novels. The hag's speech patterns in Hag-Ridden: A Fairy Tale were based in part on Dr Seuss, but also on alliterative poetry, which I first encountered in The Lord of the Rings - and Gollum's speech patterns, in particularly as narrated by Andy Serkis in the audiobook version.
So what are everyone's thoughts and experiences? Do you prefer to read the classics, or pulp? And which is reflected most in your writing? Do you find yourself inspired by different authors, so that you try something completely different?
If you can, provide concrete examples. I don't think it's particularly useful to say, "I reread Hemingway every week," or "V.S. Naipaul's writing is in the back of my mind when I write dialogue." Show us how.
"But won't my writing be derivative?"
Only if it's bad. And let's face it: if you need to be told to emulate your favourite authors, you probably haven't discovered your voice yet. That comes from writing, and writing some more, and then writing a bit more. But you have to start somewhere, and it probably helps to start from a specific place, particularly if it's a place you enjoy.
But even for us old grognards of the hobby, it's important to keep reading. I won't say we have to keep up with modern trends, but I don't think there's really a downside to absorbing as many possible styles and techniques and tricks as we can. For my sword & sorcery stories, my model is RE Howard. The Countesses of Tannensdal draws heavily on the style of Georgette Heyer's Regency romances, and more indirectly Jane Austen's novels. The hag's speech patterns in Hag-Ridden: A Fairy Tale were based in part on Dr Seuss, but also on alliterative poetry, which I first encountered in The Lord of the Rings - and Gollum's speech patterns, in particularly as narrated by Andy Serkis in the audiobook version.
So what are everyone's thoughts and experiences? Do you prefer to read the classics, or pulp? And which is reflected most in your writing? Do you find yourself inspired by different authors, so that you try something completely different?
If you can, provide concrete examples. I don't think it's particularly useful to say, "I reread Hemingway every week," or "V.S. Naipaul's writing is in the back of my mind when I write dialogue." Show us how.