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gaining a writing style

Name: Anonymous 2009-01-12 15:25

after so many years of school where ive had to analyze literary techniques and write bullshit essays about analyzing literary techniques i find myself unable to write fiction that isnt fucking boring to read because it reads like an essay

how do i drop this and gain a style that not only doesnt bore the piss out of me when trying to write and read

Name: Anonymous 2009-01-12 16:38

How about learning to use simple things like capital letters and punctuation marks first?

Name: Anonymous 2009-01-12 17:08

Binge on Thomas Pynchon. Gravity's Rainbow & V. should really open you up to what a free-form thing it can be.

Read like shit. All the greats. Be open and tolerant; try to make the rhythm of the paper as steady as your natural voice..

Name: Anonymous 2009-01-12 22:59

>>2

because one should really give a shit on an internet forum

Name: Anonymous 2009-01-13 0:21

Just read. Simple. My best motivator to write is to read, inversely. The more you read the more you can see other writing styles and shit. This does cause you to sometimes write unintentionally as a specific author (like myself, I love Neil Gaiman and find myself writing like him alot) but its still good practice. Oh yeah, second thing you should do is just write. Non-stop, and no matter what piece-of-shit writing you produce it is valuable, "cause every author produces shit" or something like that. Anyway, simple as that. Read and write. Hope you appreciate me saying things you probably thought of on your own.

Name: Anonymous 2009-01-13 3:05

>>4
One should always give a shit.

Name: Anonymous 2009-01-13 17:18

>>6
Your mom sure did give a one with you

Name: Anonymous 2009-01-13 17:20

>>7
hoooooly shit

Name: Anonymous 2009-01-13 17:45

>>7
With razor-sharp wit like that it's a mystery how anything you write could turn out boring.

Name: Anonymous 2009-01-13 19:09

>>9

thats not the OP

Name: Anonymous 2009-01-14 1:32

Read, and write. Keep a journal, write down your random thoughts, as well as bits of whatever stories you're working on. Don't worry about 'finding your voice' you'll find it when you've had some practice. People tell me I write exactly how I sound, so I suppose I've 'found my voice'. But it wasn't always that way, it took years of plugging away at my writing. Good luck.

It might help to hand write things out, as well. I find that when I get stuck or bored with something, if I hand write it out it's a lot easier and I am more creative. Don't plan everything out. It takes practice, that's all.

Name: Anonymous 2009-01-14 2:50

Just do the opposite of everything you'd do in an essay. When writing an essay, you attempt to repeat yourself as many times as possible so people actually follow what you're saying. When you write fiction, try to put every detail in as sneakily as possible. If the sentence comes out ungainly, you must delete things and hide them elsewhere. This can be pages earlier if you like. You are now writing fiction.

Name: Anonymous 2009-01-14 5:45

Don't think, feel and you'll be tanasinnOrson Scott Card.

Name: Anonymous 2009-01-22 0:17

Read as much as you possibly can. Especially people who have a particularly strong voice in their writing. You'll pick up bits here and there.

Name: Anonymous 2009-01-24 0:47

Essayists can do great fiction. Just don't try to be all flowery. Focus your energy on story instead of description and detail, let those either develop themselves or be inferred.

Don't change these.
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