HomeNewsTrendsListening to a writer’s voice

Listening to a writer’s voice

Plot and character are all very well, but it’s a novelist’s unique voice on the page that can make the difference between a memorable work of fiction and an ordinary one.

June 05, 2021 / 06:55 IST
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2018 photo of Salman Rushdie. Rushdie's new non-fiction book is called 'Languages of Truth'. (Image via Wikimedia Commons CC 2.0)
2018 photo of Salman Rushdie. Rushdie's new non-fiction book is called 'Languages of Truth'. (Image via Wikimedia Commons CC 2.0)

In an essay from Languages of Truth, Salman Rushdie’s new collection of non-fiction, he recalls the time he started writing Midnight’s Children. He began in the third person, “and to my growing frustration it felt somehow inert.” Then one day he allowed Saleem, the main character, to narrate the novel himself.

The results were magical. “What came out of me, somehow, was what I at once recognized as the best page I had ever written, in a voice that was not my own and yet gave me voice.” It famously captured “the polyglot hubbub of the Indian street”.

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In another piece, Rushdie writes of Philip Roth’s Portnoy’s Complaint. This was “that supercharged shriek of need, pain, and desire, that voice of which Roth said that, for the first time, he ‘let it rip,’ had never been heard before and still, all these years later, retains all its power.”

That’s the strength of a distinctive voice in fiction. Plot and character are all very well, but the discovery of an individual style of narration makes all the difference. In other words, it’s not what you say, it’s how you say it.