#point of view
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If you’ve read Catcher in the Rye, you know that voice can carry a novel. Voice is interesting. It can make you hate characters or really connect with them in a way you normally might not. Percy Jackson would not be the same book without Percy’s running commentary. So, what goes into writing the voice of your character? Keep in mind, maintaining a voice can be incredibly difficult, especially when the character’s voice does not resemble yours.
Sometimes writing in a voice is a little like acting. Pretend you’re that person, whoever that person maybe. I don’t mean be a stereotype, but be that person. It might take research. Like a lot of research if it’s something really far outside of your knowledgeability. But see the world the way your character would. Try to put them in a situation that will bring out their personality.
It doesn’t hurt to practice. Take on the voice of your best friend or your mom and try to write in that. First really exaggerate it and figure out how it’s different from your own natural voice.
Develop how your character talks. What kind of words does this character use? Are the recurring phrases? Figures of speech? What about their voice makes them sound like them? This is most important to know, especially once you’ve been writing in this voice, because when you run into scenes that are more difficult to write, scenes where you don’t know how that voice would sound, especially when the character is in a really different mood, this is how you maintain the voice you started with.