Thursday, September 28, 2017

Finding Your Voice in the Literary Industry Cacophony


When I first started devoting serious time to becoming (my romantic notion of) a writer, my biggest worry was that I had no voice.

Yeah, you read that right.

I'd read something online about Finding Your Voice and I worried I needed to develop my voice. It's actually kind of silly if you think about it, because just about everybody is born with a voice. You don't question it or think about it. You just speak and words come out in your own unique voice. Sure, you have to coo or babble when you're a baby (not to mention all that bawling). You have to listen to your parents and siblings speak, and you mimic them to some extent. But in the end, the only way to develop your voice is to practice speaking.

Writing is the same way, but I didn't know that. I thought I needed a special guide to teach me how to be myself.  This stems from a fear that's haunted me my whole life, and I'm probably not alone.


Is being myself good enough?


It turns out that the only way NOT to have a personal writing voice is to try too hard to be like somebody else. Don't do that.

Finding my voice in an all-women's choir
that performed in the Salt Lake City Tabernacle!! Woot!
While the guide I linked above has good ideas, like reading a lot of different books or practicing writing like your favorite authors, or writing to prompts--all this is effectively the baby listening to conversation before she tries to make words on her own, and then awkwardly copying words like "No" and "Don't" and "Stop that" (this might just be my babies).

Writing in someone else's style is fine, but don't try to be Meg Cabot. Yes, she is awesome. Yes, she is witty. Be awesome and witty in your own way.

How do I propose you do that?

Blog.

For writers, blogging is like a warm bubble bath. It's the fun and relaxation of writing without the cold shower of pass-or-fail judgment. Especially when you're first starting out. For a long time, I had 33 followers on my personal writing blog, and only about 8 hits a day from different viewers. Reaching more people is awesome, but starting small is good, too. I got into my own writing groove whenever I blogged, and even though I never turned my internal editor off (is that even possible??), I did allow myself some indulgences you simply can't do in printed fiction...

:) SQUEE!! LOL. ;) ROFL b/c That is made of awesome. OMGoodness! :p

...and the result in my novels has been palpable: I actually have a personality. Letting my hair down on my blog has freed up that personality more than copying Shakespeare or Mark Twain ever could. Not that I SQUEE in my books (though a character might at some point). They are definitely different formats, unless you're writing one of those MG books in chat format, which I think has been done to death, people.

The greatest key to finding your writing voice is to be yourself. 

Let that snark, incurable optimism, or witty cynicism seep into your novel. That's what people will relate to. Learn from others, try out new ways of expressing your themes and your characters. But don't bend over backward trying to achieve the oh-so-marketable and ever-elusive VOICE agents are always talking about. When they say that, they're really saying THAT BOOK connected with them on a personal level. Across the publishing universe, voice is as subjective as romantic chemistry. You can't fake it.

Be yourself, let your voice shine through the printed page, and trust that someone, somewhere will like you.


Originally published on Operation Awesome in December, 2010.


Wednesday, July 19, 2017

China's Past and Future in 2 Book Reviews



There is so much to love about this book! It's appealing to young and old alike. It was lent to me by sisters, ages 14 and 12. They were effusive in their praise. As a work of historical fiction, it gave them context for our class reading of Red Scarf Girl, which is memoir, China's own version of Diary of Anne Frank. Letters in the Jade Dragon Box is how I washed down Red Scarf Girl, which has an overall oppressive feeling because of the weight of oppression Jiang Ji-li truly felt. Reading this one next helped me to feel more hope for China. It is an LDS author who weaves a story of conversion and re-conversion throughout, using actual missionary history in Hong Kong to give it life. At first, the historical footnotes caught me off guard, but I came to appreciate the depth these post-chapter explanations provided. They make this book an excellent study tool for those interested in China's past and present, particularly from a religious freedom perspective. I feel this book gave me more of a connection to China, celebrating its beauty, art, and culture, while telling the very sad story of the 1960's Cultural Revolution which tore so many families apart. I highly recommend this to both adults and young people. Reading it in the same semester with Red Scarf Girl is even better.

I was moved to tears by Ji-li Jiang's story many times. I came away from this book feeling strongly that if everyone read it, the world would be a less oppressive, less ignorant, more sympathetic place. This book is a plea for compassion and law. In her epilogue Jiang says, "This is the most frightening lesson of the Cultural Revolution: Without a sound legal system, a small group or even a single person can take control of an entire country. This is as true now as it was then."
I now have a deeper respect for the United States Constitution and the rule of law, as well as the importance of kindness and generosity in building and maintaining community life. Good books entertain you. Great books make you ask yourself questions about things that matter. The best books change you in the reading. You come out a better person. Red Scarf Girl is one of these.

Saturday, October 17, 2015

Operation Awesome: Editing and Polishing: Time to Add Some Ellipses!

Check me out at Operation Awesome: Editing and Polishing: Time to Add Some Ellipses!: EDITING and POLISHING Back in July, I tackled the topic of how I do my first revision in a brilliant and witty piece entitled Cooling P...

Tuesday, July 7, 2015

Operation Awesome: First Revision: Cooling Periods and Paper

A fairly new feature over at our collaborative blog, Operation Awesome, is the #OAwritingtips. I am enjoying this series. For July, we're covering First Revision. Come talk to me about your process and learn a little about mine. When it comes to revision, there's no such thing as too many good ideas.









Operation Awesome: First Revision: Cooling Periods and Paper: First Revision For July, we're talking about the dreaded first pass of revisions on your recently completed manuscript. Revision an...

Monday, June 1, 2015

Operation Awesome: Operation Awesome Reads: June's Books 2015 #amread...

Operation Awesome: Operation Awesome Reads: June's Books 2015 #amread...: Happy June! Here's what the OA ladies are reading this month: Katrina  is reading The Great Good Thing by Roderick Townley, and  ...




Friday, May 1, 2015

Operation Awesome: Operation Awesome Reads: May's Books 2015 #amreadi...

Operation Awesome: Operation Awesome Reads: May's Books 2015 #amreadi...: Happy May! Here's what the OA troops are reading this month: Katrina just finished Stone Fox by John Reynolds Gardiner, and is read...






Friday, April 10, 2015

Operation Awesome: O.U.R. Mission to Fight Child Sex Trafficking

Operation Awesome: O.U.R. Mission to Fight Child Sex Trafficking: Join the fight to free children from sex trafficking, the worst form of slavery in our modern world!





I'm an abolitionist because INNOCENCE IS PRECIOUS! What's your reason?


 
WHITE SAILS
On Human Sacrifice and Slavery (which are one and the same)
 
by Katrina Lenay Lantz
4/10/15
 
 
KING MINOS DEMANDS A TRIBUTE:
Girls seven; of boys, the same,
to feed the insatiable appetite
of a monster of treacherous fame.
 
Eyes red like the fire that razes,
horns sharp like the bull that destroys,
it looks like a man but it isn't.
Half beast, but all brute in its ploys.
 
A hero discovers the horror
while walking his kingdom's bright shore
and balks at the terrible whisper
that his father could ever ignore--
 
And placidly send off our daughters,
our sons, to their torturous demise.
What falsehood could sanction this outrage?
What marvelous, gilded, proud lies?
 
For surely as good men do nothing
the evil that simmers will boil!
And no one can cool it or hinder
once over the cliff side it spoils--
 
When villages, houses, and people
are swept in its current of fire,
and mankind has turned the cup over
and earned all the wrath and the ire--
 
Of the TRUE KING of all HIS CREATION
who sits not idle but sure,
and sends out His heroes to rescue
each fair son and daughter so pure.
 
WHITE SAILS IF YOU COME BACK TRIUMPHANT!
Black sack cloth if King Minos wins
and the brute with his hunger unending
has sated himself on our sins.
 
Will you become one of these heroes
who conquers the beast in his lair?
Or sanction the unholy tribute,
condemning the slave to despair?
 
WHITE SAILS IF YOU COME BACK TRIUMPHANT!
Black sack cloth if King Minos wins
and the brute with his hunger unending
has sated himself on our sins.