Angels & Demons (Robert Langdon, #1) Angels & Demons question


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Passive Voice and Helping Verb Usage
Ethan Bridges-Garcia Ethan Mar 16, 2016 09:28AM
Does it concern you that Dan Brown enjoys using a lot of passive voice and helping verb usage? It's a bit distracting to me when I read something along the lines of Robert was looking, when he could just use a smile Robert looked. Just wondered.



I think the point of Dan Brown is that we need to ignore the writing idiosyncrasies and wallow in the plot and excitement. There are a lot of problems with the way he writes.

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Ethan Bridges-Garcia I've only recently became an "expert" in grammar and know the correct way it should be used. From writing myself, many people expressed the avoidance ...more
Mar 16, 2016 10:43AM
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Will Once Well, yes, except there is no "correct" way to write in English, particularly when writing fiction. The choice of active or passive voice is as much a ...more
Mar 18, 2016 07:40AM

As a retired English teacher, I support the use of the active voice but.... I am no longer as critical in my reading as I once was and find that putting the "grammar police" in the closet, although extremely difficult, doesn't make a big difference to my reading pleasure.
Unfortunately, our language world has changed big time and correct grammar is .... shudder.... not embraced as it once was.


As an editor, I consider the reason an author is using the passive voice before I change a verb. The passive voice distances an "actor" from her actions. Sometimes, particularly in dialogue, that is the author's intention. In action scenes, though, the passive voice is bulky, and it slows the pace. I'd definitely tweak those passages.


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