Kurt Vonnegut has had a major impact on my writing style, specifically his style of humor and irreverance. Consequently, when I write, I have a tendency to:
- Use one-liners to sum up long passages of text and punctuate traumatic events with comic relief. I realize that my writing can sometimes become quite verbose and labyrinthine, so I find that one-liners help regulate the pacing.
- Use dark, sarcastic, and self-deprecating humor. Sometimes I'll change up the tone of my writing, but my favorite tone to use is a cynical, self-consciously passive-aggressive one, because it has so much potential for irony and black humor.
- Make use of extensive repetition for emphasis of important details. This, I suspect, is akin to Vonnegut's usage of the phrase "So it goes" after each mention of death in Slaughterhouse-five.
- Experiment with format. For example, while my first full-length novel is primarily written in standard prose, there is one passage written as an instant messenger transcript, three as transcripts of phone conversations, and one entire chapter written as a screenplay.
- Break the fourth wall and remind the reader he or she is only reading a story and that I, the author, am in control of how it progresses.
In my stories, dogs often represent fear or avoidance (due to my own dislike of dogs), and ants are a symbol of depression or hopelessness.
I've also developed a thematic fixation on the tense relationship between younger and older generations, particularly Gen Y vs. Baby Boomers. I see my audience as my own age group. In my stories, writing from the perspective of the Millennial I am, I often openly dispute the prevailing myths about Baby Boomers' impact on American culture. Symbols of the '60s counterculture, '70s decadence, and the yuppies of the '80s are stripped of the significance they had to Baby Boomers and viewed through the lens of cold, rational objectivism. A lava lamp is just a thing. "All Along The Watchtower" is just another song. The point is to question the nostalgia and sentimentality Baby Boomers have for the past, and, as a result, the troubled, materialistic, self-absorbed culture they have bequeathed to Gen X and Gen Y in the present day.
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Mediocrity is a petty vice; aspiring to it is a grievous sin.