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Editor’s Notes: A Voice of Reason (part 3)
BY PENNY FREEMAN
Dodging the Grammar Police
We’ve been tackling that ticklish subject, voice. Of my six bullet points, we have thus far addressed:
Now, we’re finally sneaking up on the mother of all voice issues, grammar. How an author adheres to or defies the proper forms very strongly influences their narrative voice. Or, in other words, how you break the rules identifies your specific writing. But what is the difference between artistic expression and simply bad writing?
I would posit that reader comprehension lies at the heart of the answer. If a writer demonstrates ignorance of or disregard for the rules of grammar so flagrantly that the reader cannot follow the narrative, it’s time for an intervention by the grammar police. If the writer repeatedly interjects themselves into the reader’s consciousness by their language skills (or lack thereof), it is time for the red pencil of death.
I muddled on how exactly to approach this subject for several weeks. How do I say, to break the grammar rules, follow them? How do I explain what I mean without giving carte blanche to writers for rampant rule mangling?
Then, I happened upon a TED-Ex lecture given by sci-fi/fantasy author Orson Scott Card. Voila! I found my answer. Although the subject of the lecture ostensibly refers to fostering creativity in children, writers of all stripes can find useful advice herein, particularly in the first eight minutes of this eighteen-minute presentation.
The crux of the matter: before you can consciously break the rules of grammar (or perspective, or tense, or a legion of other writing guidelines), you first have to follow them. Rules provide any creative process form and structure, the proper foundation. It requires discipline, a sound understanding, and imaginative problem solving to achieve the effect you want within those strictures. A writer uses infractions of those rules to add emphasis to their written word, to create patterns and variances. To make the narrative voice distinctly their own. But, that disregard for the rules should not overshadow the content.
Have you ever strolled through an art museum and noticed the actual walls, rather than what is on them? Probably not, because curators know that plain, neutral backgrounds (often dark) allow the art upon it to draw all the attention. Consider gazing at a Van Gogh or Renoir hanging against paisley wallpaper. Would your eye be drawn to these fabulous works of art? Or would the masters simply get lost in the noise?
The same principle applies to writing. If your infractions of grammatical rules create a jumble of words without form or style, whatever is good and purposeful gets lost in the chaos. However, set against a backdrop of clear, clean prose, those same intentional variations can add power to the narrative and create an author’s unique linguistic fingerprint. It enhances, rather than detracts from the work.
If you aren’t certain if your bad grammar is the narrative voice or if it’s just plain bad grammar, school yourself. Force yourself to follow all the rules. Religiously. Punctuation, capitalization, paragraph structure, subjects and predicates, dependent clauses, dangling participles, split infinitives—all of it. Practice until that regimental style flows naturally. Once you have that skill, then you can start allowing yourself variations of speech because you are starting from a position of strength and clarity.
Finally, a reminder: most editors are not trying to destroy your voice. We’re helping you find it. We might be the grammar police, but we’re here to protect and serve, not just bully authors into submission.
Next time: It’s not just how you say it; it’s what you say.
Editor-in-chief Penny Freeman lives, writes, edits, and markets from her home in southeast Texas. She currently supervises several editorial projects, including our most recent invitation-only anthology contest, Mechanized Masterpieces 2: An American Anthology, which will be released February 28, 2015. Her latest release, Legends and Lore: An Anthology of Mythic Proportions, was released October 2014.
Intern’s Corner: Hello Fantastical World!
BY MACKENZIE DOLAN
Allow me to introduce myself. I am Mackenzie Dolan and I am a new member of the X team. I am 23 years old and am attending the wonderful University of Utah. My years at this institution will be ending in May as I will be graduating with an English major and a Psychology minor.
It is my dream to write stories and to give a voice to those crazy characters running around my head all day. I have always enjoyed picking up a book, getting caught up in a new world, and making unbelievable new friends. However, I haven’t always wanted to be a writer. My desire to become a writer actually only came two years ago. Before that I had very different plans for myself.
In school I always loved my English classes and the assignments we had from research essays, poetry, short stories, and book reports. But my plans for my future career dealt more with animals. I have always loved dolphins and had a desire to work with them. So in junior high, I made the decision that I wanted to be a dolphin trainer.
At first it was a dream of mine to work in Sea World, but, after doing a lot of research and talking to people in high school, I decided that I wanted to work with the Navy in their dolphin program. So I worked hard getting as much animal experience as I could, like interning at the aquarium and volunteering at the zoo. In high school, I also decided on a Psychology degree and did that for two and a half years.
In the middle of my junior year at university, I took a break from school and went to Japan for eighteen months for a volunteer service mission for my church. While I was there, I taught English class and told some made-up stories of mine to some friends. It was then that I decided that I wanted to change my focus, so when I came home, I switched my major to English.
I am still learning a lot of things since I have jumped on the bandwagon late, but I am enjoying this amazing art. Creating new worlds and deep characters is so exciting, and the editing process is so rewarding and thrilling. I love watching a story, whether it is my own or someone else’s, grow into a spectacular masterpiece. Although I am new and still learning, I have strong desire and am excited to be surrounded by wonderful authors and editors who can teach me all their wisdom.
This will be a great adventure!
Mackenzie Dolan is getting her feet wet in our marketing department as a social media intern. All those overworked intern stereotypes? That’s Mackenzie. Except, we don’t send her out for coffee or to pick up the drycleaning.
Publisher’s Desk: Read All About It!
BY JESSICA SHEN
Introducing the Xchyler Publishing Newsletter!
We have some exciting news today—Xchyler Publishing will be releasing our first newsletter this Friday, January 30th! Thank you to all the lovely people who came by our booth at Teslsacon to sign up for our email list. Here’s a look at some of the things that you can expect to see on our newsletter:
- Exclusive interviews with our talented authors
- Information about upcoming conventions Xchyler will be attending
- Notification of upcoming anthology contests and open submissions
- Sneak peeks of upcoming releases and release parties
- Featured blog posts
- Upcoming sales and promotions
- Super-secret only-for-you coupon codes!
. . . and much more!
Since this will be our first newsletter, please let us know what you think! What would you like to see? This is an evolving process for us and we are open to suggestions, so don’t be afraid to let us know what you like and don’t like, and you may see your requests in our next release! You can contact us on Facebook and Twitter @XchylerPublish, or email us at HSPMarketing@XchylerPublishing.com.
Senior Editor Jessica Shen works tirelessly at the X. In addition to pitching in with our marketing efforts, she has a full docket of fantasy, speculative fiction, urban fantasy, and Steampunk projects to keep her busy. Her most recent venture, ON THE ISLE OF SOUND AND WONDER by Alyson Grauer, was released in November to outstanding reviews. Her next project, REVOLT by Ben Ireland, Book 2 of the Kingdom City franchisewill be released summer 2015.
Hot New Release: The Toll of Another Bell
BY JODI L. MILNER, TC PHILLIPS, TIMOTHY VINCENT, ELISE STEPHENS, THAXSON PATTERSON II, SCOTT E. TARBET, F.M. LONGO, GINGER MANN, J.R. POTTER, & DANIELLE SHIPLEY
EDITED BY MCKENNA GARDNER
Join us as we celebrate the release of THE TOLL OF ANOTHER BELL. Win lots of fun prizes with our book release blog hop all over the interweb!
Sunday, 01.25.2015
Candy O’Donnell
Julkbear Reads
The Naughty Librarians Playground
Living Writing Teaching
Creativity from Chaos
Monday, 01.26.2015
Kitty Muse and Me
Semi Short Chic
Every On Word
Scott E. Tarbet, Author
Tuesday, 01.27.2015
The Book Beacon
Mel’s Shelves
Notes from Ginger
The J. Aurel Guay Archive
Wednesday, 01.28.2015
A. E. Albert, A Writer’s Blog
My Book Angel
Are You Afraid of the Dark?
My Literary Quest
Thursday, 01.29.2015
SnoopyDoo’s Book Reviews
Highlighted Author
The Author Visits
Friday, 01.30.2015
Author Sanday Love
A Book a Day Keeps Boredom Away
Ben Ireland Books
Saturday, 01.31.2015
January Gray
Laura’s Interests
Perpetual Chaos of a Wandering Mind
BLOG HOP GIVEAWAY
YOUTUBE GIVEAWAY
Sound-off Saturday: Word of the Day
AUTHORING AS A NOUN
BY CANDACE J. THOMAS
Someone argued to me that there are no authors and that every author is a plagiarist, grabbing from history or different experiences. She said, “To AUTHOR as a verb is to create something new and there is nothing new in literature.” By her own definition I could see her point. I think that everything that someone writes is in a way a reflection of the writer’s experiences and what they draw from to create something unique.
My rebuttal to her, as an author, was I don’t really care.
It’s not about authoring as a verb, but as a noun.
Author- a writer of a book, a creator of a world, one who constructs a document… the essence of being an AUTHOR.
To me there are factors that should be accounted for:
THE THERAPY. If you didn’t know that many writers use writing as therapy, than you are not a writer. We write because it keeps us sane. Somewhere in my brain is an overactive gland that produces thousands of creative thoughts and images all the time. This is a way to let the creative juice drain out. A build-up of creative energy without an outlet would make anyone go crazy. Writing gives my brain something to do, keeping it healthy and thinking. Life is hard, and without allowing my fingers to fly on the keyboard, I would be a psychotic mess.
THE EXPERIENCE. Try writing a novel, if anything, just for the experience of doing it. It surprised me when I first started of how many ideas came that I wasn’t expecting, like peeling a ripe orange and finding candy inside. The characters came to life. It was like these characters were peering over my shoulder waiting for their names to appear on the paper, feeling just as excited as I was to find out what was about to happen to them. People complain that it’s hard, but of course it is. It has to be or it wouldn’t be rewarding. We know it’s hard, but it’s also fun as hell.
THE READER. The reader is the most important component to the author. A single individual, who lives and breathes in and out every day, goes to works, eats three square meals, sleeps forty winks… doesn’t get a chance to adventure, to explore, to escape. That’s a writer’s job—to give someone a chance to experience life through words. The reader is why we write, so they can escape for a few brief hours to a different time or dimension in their own subconscious. And if they take away some of our experiences with them. . . Great! That helps enrich their lives vicariously through ours.
Just as a baby has a rich pedigree given in the genetics it has to make up a body, a story has the similar creation. It’s full of experiences, events, history, and personal development that is so ingrained in a writer’s soul that no one could extract the origin, just like your brown eyes.
It’s not the story but how we tell it, how we live up to the noun, the definition of being an Author.
Candace Thomasensures her mental health through prolific writing from her home in Salt Lake City, Utah, where she lives with her husbandl, two daughters, and a tailess cat.
Released in April, Vivatera, Book 1 of the self-titled series, earned Candace the League of Utah Writers Diamond Award for Best Novel of 2013. Her follow-up offering, Conjectrix, is slated for release in April 2014. Candace’s short story, “The Hawkweed”, will appear in The X’s 2014 winter fantasy anthology, Moments in Millennia.