Writers Tricks of the Trade SPRING 2017 ISSUE 2, VOLUME 7 | Page 13

T HE VOICE IS THE THING BY R OBERT W. W ALKER , AUTHOR OF G ONE G ORILLA & K ILLER I NSTINCT The very word VOICE has resonance. Words make sound at the elemental level; in fact, at the ‘cellular’ level so do the letters of the alphabet, and they all rhyme with one another like A and K, C and B. Let that sink in. Many an art relies on resonance. singing of lyrics, poetic lines, acting, creating characters in a story or novel; even a poem needs a VOICE. The careful selection of that voice and the honing of it as one writes and rewrites a story is the number one ‘secret’ tool in the pantheon of tools professional authors use every day. R OBERT W. W ALKER A UTHOR W RITERS T OOL B OX I will not bore you with quotes from every successful author who has written on the importance of VOICE and its connection with Point of View. Instead, I’m going to drive home the point here. Writers have workbenches, tool boxes, saws, levels, and wrenches hanging about their ears. The working writer utilizes props, for instance, turning everyday items, such as a door into a symbol of an impenetrable wall of silence, a symbol of the inability of two people to EVER communicate. Writers awls and screwdrivers from a box of tools they dip into when they need—let us say, a flat brush, a large one, a thin-line brush—authors use props, objects, plugs in the wall, and they color their stories with symbolic colors, or they choose to use no color in a grim tale. In their tool boxes, they have screwdrivers called setting, dialogue, character (traits) and plot (challenges to the designated bedrock character of a given actor in the story). Whole panels of authors get together at writer conferences to discuss “The Most Important Element” in storytelling. One panel will concentrate on Setting as the most important of all, while another will lambast the audience with Dialogue as the most important element, while another will zero in on Plot or whatever. The key element necessary to carry off all of the other elements, however, and to use all the tools necessary to tell a story that unfolds perfectly, remains VOICE. I hope to convince you that harnessing the oft nebulous, hard to pin down Authorial Voice (authoritative voice) of your given story is your #1 job above all other ‘important’ elements and tools. By authorial/authoritative, I refer to an uneducated child’s voice in Twain’s Huckleberry Finn as Huck tells his tale. In To Kill W RITERS ’ T RICKS OF THE T RADE P AGE 5 S PRING 2017