Gsd-skill-creator voice-style
Voice, style, and register in writing across all forms. Covers voice (authorial presence, authenticity, persona, tone), style as choice (diction, syntax, rhythm, density, register), the elements of style (Strunk's principles, economy, parallel construction, definite/specific/concrete language), distinctive voices (stream of consciousness, minimalism, maximalism, vernacular, lyric, journalistic), style analysis (identifying an author's characteristic moves, close reading for technique), register and audience (formal/informal, academic/public, shifting register for effect), and imitation as learning (deliberate practice, pastiche, finding your own voice through others). Use when developing voice, analyzing style, adapting register, or teaching style awareness.
git clone https://github.com/Tibsfox/gsd-skill-creator
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/Tibsfox/gsd-skill-creator "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/examples/skills/writing/voice-style" ~/.claude/skills/tibsfox-gsd-skill-creator-voice-style && rm -rf "$T"
examples/skills/writing/voice-style/SKILL.mdVoice & Style
Voice is the quality that makes a writer recognizable across different works and subjects. Style is the set of technical choices -- diction, syntax, rhythm, density -- that produce voice. Voice without craft is personality without skill. Craft without voice is competence without soul. The goal is both: a writer whose technical choices serve a distinctive vision. This skill covers what voice is, how style works as a system of choices, the major stylistic traditions, style analysis techniques, register management, and the path from imitation to originality.
Agent affinity: woolf (stream of consciousness, lyric voice), baldwin (moral clarity, essay voice), angelou (performance, spoken rhythm), strunk (economy, precision), orwell (plain style, anti-ornament)
Concept IDs: writ-voice-development, writ-word-choice-connotation, writ-close-reading, writ-multiple-interpretations
Part I -- Voice
What Voice Is
Voice is not a technique you apply. It is the cumulative effect of every choice you make -- which words, which syntax, which details, which silences. A writer's voice emerges from what they notice, what they care about, and how their mind moves from one thought to the next.
Woolf's voice is long sentences that track consciousness as it flows from perception to memory to reflection, with subordinate clauses opening into further subordinate clauses, so that the reader experiences the way attention actually moves -- not linearly but by association.
Orwell's voice is short, direct, Anglo-Saxon. It distrusts ornament. It believes clarity is a moral obligation. "If it is possible to cut a word out, always cut it out."
Baldwin's voice is sermonic -- the cadences of the Black church fused with the precision of a French novel. Long sentences that build through parallel construction toward a devastating final clause. "I love America more than any other country in this world, and, exactly for this reason, I insist on the right to criticize her perpetually."
Angelou's voice is embodied. Language lives in the body -- in breath, in rhythm, in the physical sensation of words spoken aloud. Her prose has the quality of performance: each sentence is voiced, not just written.
Authenticity vs. Persona
Voice is not always the writer's "true self." Many great writers construct a persona -- a version of themselves optimized for the page. Orwell-the-writer is more decisive, more morally clear, than Orwell-the-person. Didion-the-writer is cooler, more detached, than Didion-the-person. The persona is not dishonest; it is a literary construction that enables the writer to do their best work.
Tone
Tone is the writer's attitude toward the subject and the reader. It is conveyed through diction, syntax, and selection of detail -- not through explicit statements ("I feel strongly about this").
| Tone | How achieved | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Ironic | Saying less than is meant; gap between surface and depth | Austen, Swift |
| Urgent | Short sentences, present tense, imperative mood | Baldwin's essays |
| Meditative | Long sentences, subordination, circling repetition | Woolf, Marilynne Robinson |
| Clinical | Precise vocabulary, passive constructions, emotional distance | Didion, Sontag |
| Intimate | Second person, direct address, confessional detail | Angelou, Rankine |
Part II -- Style as Choice
Diction
Word choice is the most fundamental stylistic decision. Every word carries denotation (literal meaning), connotation (emotional and cultural associations), and register (formal/informal, technical/colloquial).
Latinate vs. Anglo-Saxon. English has two word stocks: Latin-derived words (utilize, facilitate, ameliorate) and Germanic/Anglo-Saxon words (use, help, improve). Latinate words sound formal, abstract, official. Anglo-Saxon words sound direct, physical, plain. Most strong prose favors Anglo-Saxon as the baseline with Latinate words reserved for precision.
Syntax
Sentence structure shapes how the reader processes information and experiences rhythm.
Parataxis: Coordinate clauses joined by "and" or placed side by side. "He came. He saw. He conquered." Creates flatness, speed, accumulation.
Hypotaxis: Subordinate clauses nested within main clauses. Woolf, Faulkner, Henry James. Creates complexity, hierarchy, nuance -- but risks losing the reader in the architecture.
Periodic sentence: The main clause comes last, after a series of subordinate elements. Suspense builds as the reader waits for the grammatical resolution. "Despite the rain, the cold, the exhaustion of three days without sleep, and the knowledge that rescue was unlikely -- they kept walking."
Cumulative sentence: The main clause comes first, followed by modifying phrases that add detail. "She walked into the room, her coat dripping, her umbrella still open, trailing water across the polished floor."
Rhythm
Prose has rhythm, though it is not metered like poetry. Rhythm in prose comes from sentence length variation, stressed syllable patterns, and the placement of pauses (commas, periods, dashes, semicolons).
The rhythm rule. Vary sentence length. A string of long sentences numbs. A string of short sentences chops. Alternation creates energy. The short sentence after a long one hits hard. Like this.
Density
How much information per sentence. Hemingway's prose is low-density: simple words, simple syntax, one image per sentence. Faulkner's is high-density: multiple subordinate clauses, allusions, sensory details layered in a single sentence. Neither is inherently better -- density should match the reader's engagement and the subject's complexity.
Part III -- The Elements of Style
Strunk's Core Principles
William Strunk Jr.'s The Elements of Style (1918, expanded with E. B. White, 1959) distilled writing advice to its essence:
1. Use the active voice. "The burglar stole the painting" not "The painting was stolen by the burglar." Active voice clarifies agency.
2. Put statements in positive form. "He forgot" not "He did not remember." Positive form is more direct and uses fewer words.
3. Use definite, specific, concrete language. "A period of unfavorable weather set in" is weak. "It rained every day for a week" is strong. Abstraction insulates the reader from experience; specificity creates it.
4. Omit needless words. "The question as to whether" = "whether." "He is a man who" = "he." "The fact that I had arrived" = "my arrival." Every word must earn its place.
5. Use parallel construction. Elements in a series must share grammatical form. "She liked reading, writing, and to swim" violates parallel construction. "She liked reading, writing, and swimming" does not.
6. Keep related words together. Modifiers should sit next to what they modify. "He only ate the salad" (did nothing else to it?) vs. "He ate only the salad" (nothing else).
Economy
Economy is not minimalism. Minimalism is a style choice -- sparse, stripped, deliberately bare. Economy is a principle: use exactly as many words as the thought requires. A complex idea needs complex expression. A simple idea needs simple expression. Economy means no more and no less.
Part IV -- Distinctive Voices
Stream of Consciousness
Virginia Woolf, James Joyce, William Faulkner. The attempt to render consciousness as it actually flows -- associative, non-linear, mixing perception with memory with reflection. Punctuation thins or disappears. Sentence boundaries blur. The reader enters the character's mind directly.
Woolf's technique differs from Joyce's. Woolf's stream is lyric and composed -- it has beauty and shape even as it flows. Joyce's (especially in Ulysses) is rawer, more chaotic, more committed to following consciousness wherever it goes, including into tedium.
Minimalism
Hemingway, Raymond Carver, Amy Hempel. Short sentences. Simple words. Omission as technique. What is not said carries as much weight as what is said. Minimalism trusts the reader to infer.
Maximalism
Faulkner, Toni Morrison, David Foster Wallace. Long sentences, abundant detail, multiple registers, footnotes within footnotes. Maximalism attempts to capture the full complexity of experience by refusing to simplify.
Vernacular
Zora Neale Hurston, Mark Twain, Junot Diaz. The speech patterns of a specific community rendered on the page. Vernacular voice insists that literary language is not limited to Standard English. It carries cultural knowledge, rhythm, and identity that standard prose cannot.
Journalistic Plain Style
Clear, direct, fact-first. The inverted pyramid (most important information first). Short paragraphs. Attribution on every claim. The style optimizes for a reader who may stop reading at any point -- every paragraph must stand alone as useful.
Part V -- Style Analysis
Identifying an Author's Moves
Close reading for style requires attention to:
- Sentence length. Measure the average and the range. Hemingway averages ~12 words. Woolf averages ~30. The range matters as much as the average.
- Sentence type. Simple, compound, complex, compound-complex. What is the dominant pattern?
- Diction register. Anglo-Saxon vs. Latinate. Concrete vs. abstract. Formal vs. colloquial.
- Figurative density. How many figures (metaphors, similes) per page? Are they conventional or original?
- Paragraph structure. Long or short paragraphs? Topic-sentence-first or delayed?
- What is omitted. What does the writer consistently leave out? What does the reader have to supply?
The Pastiche Exercise
Write a paragraph in another author's style. This is not parody -- it is the deliberate practice of inhabiting another writer's technical choices. By reproducing the moves, you understand them from the inside. Then you can decide which to adopt, adapt, or reject in your own work.
Part VI -- Register and Audience
Formal and Informal Register
Register is the level of formality appropriate to the context. The same idea expressed in different registers:
- Formal academic: "The data suggest a statistically significant correlation between socioeconomic status and educational attainment."
- Professional report: "Lower-income students consistently score below higher-income peers."
- Journalistic: "Poor kids do worse in school. The numbers are clear."
- Conversational: "Money matters for school. Everyone knows it, and the data back it up."
No register is inherently superior. The question is always: who is reading, and what does the context require?
Shifting Register for Effect
Skilled writers shift register within a piece to create contrast, humor, or emphasis. Baldwin moves from biblical cadence to street vernacular in the space of a sentence. The shift is the point -- it enacts the coexistence of the sacred and the profane, the formal and the raw, that defines his subject.
Cross-References
- woolf agent: Stream of consciousness, interiority, lyric prose style. The exemplar of voice as structural principle.
- baldwin agent: Essay voice, sermonic rhythm, moral clarity through style.
- angelou agent: Performance voice, embodied rhythm, spoken-word style.
- strunk agent: Economy, precision, the mechanics of clear style.
- orwell agent: Plain style, anti-ornament, clarity as ethics.
- narrative-craft skill: How voice shapes and is shaped by narrative choices.
- poetry-form skill: Compression and sound devices shared with prose style.
References
- Strunk, W., Jr., & White, E. B. (1959). The Elements of Style. Macmillan.
- Woolf, V. (1929). A Room of One's Own. Hogarth Press.
- Orwell, G. (1946). "Politics and the English Language." Horizon.
- Baldwin, J. (1955). Notes of a Native Son. Beacon Press.
- Le Guin, U. K. (1998). Steering the Craft. Eighth Mountain Press.
- Prose, F. (2006). Reading Like a Writer. HarperCollins.
- Fish, S. (2011). How to Write a Sentence. Harper.
- Lanham, R. A. (2006). Revising Prose. 5th ed. Longman.