from writer's digest
Adair Lara
Do you obsess
about the tone of your writing as you revise? You should. Tone is one of the
most overlooked elements of writing. It can create interest, or kill it.
It’s no wonder
that so many of the countless conversations I’ve had with writing students
and colleagues have been about problems related to tone. A friend submitting a
novel says the editors “don’t like the main character.” A nonfiction book on balancing
a family and a career skirts the edge of whining. An agent turns down a query
because she feels “too much distance from the heart of the story.” I scan the
latest work of a journalist friend who’s coming to dinner and find it
meticulously sourced and well written, but grim in outlook.
And of course
any publication you want to write for will have its own tone, which it would be
smart for you to try to match. Notice how quietly all New Yorker profile pieces begin, while Utne Reader favors unconventional and unexpected viewpoints that
challenge the status quo.
What exactly
do I mean by tone? That’s a good question, as there are many terms—mood, style,
voice, cadence, inflection—used to mean much the same thing. For now let’s agree that
tone is the author’s attitude toward his subject: grave, amused, scientific,
intimate, aggrieved, authoritative, whatever.
If you were a
photographer, tone would be the way you light your subject. For dramatic
shadows, lit from the side. For a scary effect, from above. For romance, lit
with candles. In a movie, tone is often conveyed with music—think of the
ominous score accompanying the girl swimming in shark-infested waters in Jaws.
A writer
doesn’t have a
soundtrack or a strobe light to build the effect she wants. She has conflict,
surprise, imagery, details, the words she chooses, and the way she arranges
them in sentences. Like the tone you use when you talk to somebody, tone in
writing determines how a reader responds. If the piece sounds angry, he gets
nervous. If it’s wry and knowing, he settles in for an enjoyable read. If it’s dull, he
leaves it on the train, half read.
Thus, the
wrong tone can derail an otherwise good piece. I’m surprised how seldom writing
students note this during our workshop discussions, as if it’s impolite to
admit that they’re made uncomfortable by how much the narrator seems to hate her
mother, or to say that their thoughts drifted elsewhere by the second page of
the overly abstract piece about mindfulness in the workplace.
You can
detect tone problems in your own work simply by noting where your attention
wanders as you reread it. Or, better, by reading it aloud. When you’re ready to
revise a piece, try reading it to someone else, or asking someone to read it to
you. You won’t have to search for awkward or boring or whiny parts—you’ll hear them.
Some problems
with tone are small and can be easily fixed during revision. Others might
require a new approach to the piece as a whole. Let’s look at a
few of the easiest and most effective ways to improve the tone of your writing.
1. AVOID A PREDICTABLE TREATMENT OF YOUR SUBJECT.
In the first draft you write what people expect you to write—what you expect yourself to write. “I wanted a car.” The tone becomes predictable. Now, during your revision, go deeper. Seek out the harder truths. It’s in the second, third, fourth draft that you say something we don’t expect you to say, something even you didn’t expect you to say. When you get tired of being nice. “I wanted a car so I could drive out of my marriage.” Surprise yourself, and you will surprise your reader.
In the first draft you write what people expect you to write—what you expect yourself to write. “I wanted a car.” The tone becomes predictable. Now, during your revision, go deeper. Seek out the harder truths. It’s in the second, third, fourth draft that you say something we don’t expect you to say, something even you didn’t expect you to say. When you get tired of being nice. “I wanted a car so I could drive out of my marriage.” Surprise yourself, and you will surprise your reader.
Similarly,
you’ll want to
avoid taking an overly emotional approach to an overly emotional subject. Think
of the dry, reserved tone in which Joan Didion recalls the anguish of losing
her husband in The Year of Magical
Thinking. What if she had wailed about her loss? There would be nothing for
us readers to do, even if the emotions being reported to us were very sad.
(Note: If you’re having a hard time distancing yourself from the raw emotion
of a personal subject, this may be a sign that you need to let time do its
magic work. Frank McCourt said it took him years before he could detach from
his anger toward his feckless father enough to give Angela’s Ashes its
nonjudgmental tone. When something bad happens, of course we feel upset, even
as if life has treated us unfairly—but that’s not a great
place to write from. Let the experience ripen in your memory until you’ve achieved
the distance you need.)
If your
subject is inherently serious, try taking a lighter approach. What’s Your Poo Telling You? came to Chronicle Books as a serious examination of—well, you
know. In that form, it might have sold a few thousand copies. The lighter
treatment led to sales of hundreds of
thousands of copies. There’s no denying that titles with tone sell books: Consider My Miserable, Lonely Lesbian
Pregnancy or Skinny Bitch.
2. KEEP TONE CONSISTENT FROM START TO FINISH.
Make sure your very first sentence establishes the tone you want. Look at the opening line of “The Lesson” by Toni Cade Bambara:
Make sure your very first sentence establishes the tone you want. Look at the opening line of “The Lesson” by Toni Cade Bambara:
Back in the days when everyone was old and stupid or
young and foolish and me and Sugar were the only ones just right, this lady
moved on our block with nappy hair and proper speech and no makeup.
In one
sentence, you know who everybody is. Not only do you want to read on, but you
want to know what else she’s written so you can get that, too.
You will
choose different tones for different subjects, of course, just as you would
dress differently for a date than for an interview. But stay away from changing
tones within a piece. One minute you’re riffing comically on Uncle
Frank’s parade of
girlfriends, and the next, the reader is caught chortling when you shift to
Uncle Frank’s abuse of his daughter. Or the thriller shifts from a slumped
body in an alley to the detective’s girlfriend shopping for
bridal gowns, and suddenly we’re in a romance. (Notice, by the way, how many genres actually
have tone in their names: thriller,
romance, mystery, horror. …)
Read your
work looking for places where the tone fades or shifts. Focus your revision
there.
3. CUT RUTHLESSLY.
If you reread a piece and decide that nothing works until the second page, why not simply start it there?
If you reread a piece and decide that nothing works until the second page, why not simply start it there?
The delete
key is your friend. The novelist Carolyn Chute told Writers Ask: “I write a lot of junk. On and on and on, all this junk. But
every now and then this dramatic moment happens, so I lift that out and put
that aside. And then I write all this junk: They’re brushing their teeth, they’re sitting
there, they’re looking around—you know. Then something will
happen and I’ll pull that out. Because those are the only strong things.”
Read your
work looking for places where your engagement wanes. Boring is bad. Careful is
right next to it. When it comes to tone, don’t try to fix the boring parts—toss them.
You can’t fix boring.
Other places
where the delete key comes in handy:
Off-topic tangents. You know how it goes: You start out writing about the president’s pooch, and
by the homestretch you’re discoursing disdainfully on the state of our economy and what
a boob the president is—as if people are lining up to hear your thoughts on that. Stick
to the subject at hand.
Overemphasis on themes. Writing fiction? Don’t hit readers over the head with your own interpretation of the
meaning of it all. You provide the right detail—say, the wooden coffin—and they’ll supply the
mortality of man. Resist the urge to overtly explain—it can come
off as condescending or redundant.
4. LET TENSION SUSTAIN TONE.
Your piece, whatever it is, should be rife with conflict. It’s not enough to write an essay about how much you like to spend the day in bed. If nothing is stopping you from lazing around under the sheets, then you have no problem, and thus the piece has no tension—an essential element in sustaining any tone for the long haul. If you find you’ve committed this mistake, whether in a fictional story or a true one, bring in someone with the opposite point of view (mothers are always good for this!). That’s why columnists so often reference their mates—to be the foil, the reasonable one, so the author isn’t ranting in a vacuum.
Your piece, whatever it is, should be rife with conflict. It’s not enough to write an essay about how much you like to spend the day in bed. If nothing is stopping you from lazing around under the sheets, then you have no problem, and thus the piece has no tension—an essential element in sustaining any tone for the long haul. If you find you’ve committed this mistake, whether in a fictional story or a true one, bring in someone with the opposite point of view (mothers are always good for this!). That’s why columnists so often reference their mates—to be the foil, the reasonable one, so the author isn’t ranting in a vacuum.
5. USE YOUR VOICE.
Are you one of the many writers who blog? Unless you know tomorrow’s stock prices or are telling readers how to relight a furnace on a freezing day, it will be your voice, not the content, that draws them in. So you must sound like somebody. This is true with other forms of personal writing, as well. Resist the urge to come off as uncomplicated, reasonable or polite. If you’re expressing opinions, express them! (Note that this is a format where opinion is the point, not a tiresome add-on.) Don’t say that whether or not someone likes a particular film “seems to me a matter of sensibility and perspective.” We know that! Be in a mood. Take a position. “Anyone who doesn’t like The Ruling Class should be cast into hell for all eternity.” Look for opportunities to bring a human voice into your work. There’s more sense of someone behind the words “I had a breast cut off” (Molly Ivins) than “I had a mastectomy.”
Are you one of the many writers who blog? Unless you know tomorrow’s stock prices or are telling readers how to relight a furnace on a freezing day, it will be your voice, not the content, that draws them in. So you must sound like somebody. This is true with other forms of personal writing, as well. Resist the urge to come off as uncomplicated, reasonable or polite. If you’re expressing opinions, express them! (Note that this is a format where opinion is the point, not a tiresome add-on.) Don’t say that whether or not someone likes a particular film “seems to me a matter of sensibility and perspective.” We know that! Be in a mood. Take a position. “Anyone who doesn’t like The Ruling Class should be cast into hell for all eternity.” Look for opportunities to bring a human voice into your work. There’s more sense of someone behind the words “I had a breast cut off” (Molly Ivins) than “I had a mastectomy.”
6. CONVEY TONE THROUGH DETAILS AND DESCRIPTIONS.
Consider the difference between “in October” and “under an October sky.” A description of scenery, however luscious, can tire the reader if that’s all it is. Use the imagery to show us your character’s mood: A sad character will notice rotting houses and untended yards; a contented one will see picturesque shacks and gardens in a profuse state of nature.
Consider the difference between “in October” and “under an October sky.” A description of scenery, however luscious, can tire the reader if that’s all it is. Use the imagery to show us your character’s mood: A sad character will notice rotting houses and untended yards; a contented one will see picturesque shacks and gardens in a profuse state of nature.
When adding
details to enrich your writing, tone comes from being as specific as possible.
Change “My husband committed suicide” to “My husband
gassed himself in our Passat in the Austrian Alps.”
I once taught
a travel-writing class aboard a cruise up the Amazon, and sent passengers
ashore to a remote village with notebooks. One student, surprised and amused by
the satellite dishes towering over the small huts, dubbed them “the flowers
of the Amazon” in her resulting piece. Another, having overheard the song “The Air That
I Breathe” on an antiquated village speaker, wrote, “The fact is
you can hear the whole planet breathing while you’re here. As one Brazilian told
me, it’s the lung of the world.” Tone in travel writing comes from such acute
observations.
In memoir or
fiction, it comes also from offbeat character details, like this one from the
memoir The Glass Castle by Jeannette
Walls:
Dad was so sure a posse of federal investigators was
on our trail that he smoked his unfiltered cigarettes from the wrong end. That
way, he explained, he burned up the brand name, and if the people who were
tracking us looked in his ashtray, they’d find unidentifiable butts
instead of Pall Malls that could be traced to him.
The narrator
here, it is safe to say, is not admiring the cunning of her father; the tone suggests
she is old enough to worry about the folly of her parents.
7. LEARN TO RECOGNIZE BUILT-IN PROBLEMS WITH TONE.
Everybody who’s ever been fired has sat down to write a book about it. But harping on the wrong that’s been done to you can make your readers uneasy. If they were seated next to you on a plane, they’d be desperately longing to change seats. Lawsuits, controversial issues, other people’s behavior, how overwhelmed you were by the flood of wedding gifts, and what a chore it was to write all those thank-you notes: all such topics force you to work hard to overcome the reader’s unease at smelling an agenda, or anger, or bragging.
Everybody who’s ever been fired has sat down to write a book about it. But harping on the wrong that’s been done to you can make your readers uneasy. If they were seated next to you on a plane, they’d be desperately longing to change seats. Lawsuits, controversial issues, other people’s behavior, how overwhelmed you were by the flood of wedding gifts, and what a chore it was to write all those thank-you notes: all such topics force you to work hard to overcome the reader’s unease at smelling an agenda, or anger, or bragging.
In these
instances, to fix the tone, you have to fix the way you think about a given
subject. You have to back off, calm down, see other points of view, maybe even
take some responsibility for whatever happened. When writing about such
delicate subjects, you must not let a negative tone take over by ascribing
motives to people: You just tell what they did, and let the reader read motive
into it. You must write with forgiveness, understanding and humor. In some
ways, this can be a payoff to examining your tone as you write: You change the
writing, and the writing changes you. But if you find this is not possible with
your subject, don’t be afraid to scrap a project that you discover has inherent
problems with tone. You’ll be a better writer for it.
No comments:
Post a Comment