Jackman
New member
- Joined
- Feb 20, 2026
- Messages
- 8
I'm a fiction writer (aspiring, but let's dream big!), and I've been obsessing over narrative voice lately. I'm writing a novel in first person, and my protagonist is a sarcastic, weary detective in their 40s. At first, I kept slipping into this very proper, almost literary narration. It sounded like a book about him, not like him actually telling the story.
Then I had a breakthrough. I went through an entire chapter and forced myself to use every single contraction possible. "I had not" became "I hadn't." "I would not" became "I wouldn't." "It was not" became "It wasn't." The difference was INSTANT. Suddenly, the prose had attitude. It had rhythm. It had him.
The world-weary sigh was baked right into the language. It's amazing how these tiny, invisible words shape the entire psychology of a character. You don't even notice them consciously, but you feel them. For any other writers out there struggling to find your character's voice, just check your contractions. It's like a magic button for authenticity! Who else has experienced this?
Then I had a breakthrough. I went through an entire chapter and forced myself to use every single contraction possible. "I had not" became "I hadn't." "I would not" became "I wouldn't." "It was not" became "It wasn't." The difference was INSTANT. Suddenly, the prose had attitude. It had rhythm. It had him.
The world-weary sigh was baked right into the language. It's amazing how these tiny, invisible words shape the entire psychology of a character. You don't even notice them consciously, but you feel them. For any other writers out there struggling to find your character's voice, just check your contractions. It's like a magic button for authenticity! Who else has experienced this?