Comshaw
VAGITARIAN
- Joined
- Nov 9, 2000
- Posts
- 11,700
[fulminate]I want to start by saying this is not an attack on anyone, merely an observation and some general thoughts.
@AwkwardMD and @Omenainen recently reviewed @EmilyMiller ‘s story A Hard Day's Night, and one if their major criticisms was sentence structure; specifically starting sentences with And or But, the differences between dependent and independent clauses, etc.
It's no secret Emily and I have formed a friendship, and as such, I proofread her stories all the time. So I suppose one could possibly blame ME for not pointing those kinds of things out to her.
But the fact is, I personally am less concerned with “Perfect Grammar” or “Prefect Structure” and more into the individual voice and style of the author.
I see the way Emily writes as HER voice, HER style. It may nor be technically perfect by textbook standards, but it works for her.
I have my own individual style and I'm well aware I probably don't obey every textbook “rule” on writing.
Someone here recently made a joke about how every sentence I write is an individual paragraph and I had to laugh because yeah, I tend to do that. (And for the record, the joke didn't offend me)
Now, the reason I bring all that up is this: Almost every day now we're getting a new thread or comment about how someone has had their story rejected because its suspected of being written by AI.
Many have theorized that using apps like ChatGPT to edit stories is triggering some auto-bot review program trained to recognize AI.
So authors with good intent to write an honest story but use a program to edit their story to be more grammatically correct now run the risk of having the story rejected because it's so “perfect” the screening program mistakes it for AI.
So what's an amateur writer to do?
All I can do is offer my own personal feelings on it all. Yours may differ. And that's okay.
This is a site for AMATEUR writers. As such, most of us here are, well...fucking amateurs.
So maybe cut us a little slack, ya know? Maybe we write broken sentences. Maybe we fuck up and switch between past and present tense.
God forbid we use a comma instead of a semicolon or vice versa, right?
Me? I'd rather read an amateur author with a unique voice and style who may botch some technical stuff but still manage to tell an entertaining tale then some perfectly polished thing with all the heart, soul and individuality of it drained away by “PERFECT” editing.
We're all different, unique individuals. And I think we should be allowed to write like it.
How boring would it be if all our stories were so perfectly well edited that they all sounded exactly the same?
Again, these are MY thoughts, and in no way meant to do anything more than inspire discussion.
Not accusations. Not arguments. I'm not out to get anyone nor here to defend anything.
Back to the OP's original post:
As a sausage-fingered, two-fingered typist, I use Grammerly for two things, spell checking and punctuation mistakes. I get all kinda' alerts admonishing me that "this needs to be clearer" or some such wanting me to change how I say things. 98% of the time I ignore them. If I took every alert or every suggestion from the program it would change how I want my words to impact the reader.
We are amateurs and we do make mistakes. Because of that status we do not have the advantage professional writers do, a gaggle of editors to go over our work multiple times to find and correct mistakes. As a prolific reader I can attest that even then, mistakes are made by even the most famous and prolific of the wordsmiths.
As authors, the one thing we CAN NOT allow is the mushing of our distinctive voice into a nice little acceptably sterile monotone because that is what the "experts" say should be. And it is also what an AI would do, a story absolutely perfect in every respect, except it reads like a flat, stale beer tastes.
Learn the mechanics of the language. Without that we have no defining outline in which to work. Although I shudder at destroying any book, if you have a book on style my advice is to burn it. And then develop your own.
As amatuers we have the freedom to do it as we please. In that respect I'm of a mind with SamualX, You don't like the way I write? Cool, go read someone else's work and leave mine be.
And I start sentences with an and or but all the time.
[/fulminate]
Comshaw