Okay, it's irresistible, a perfect way for writers to waste time (as if we needed new ways). You enter a sample of your work, and a "statistical analysis tool ... analyzes your word choice and writing style and compares them with those of the famous writers." The question answered: Who do you write like?
A former Crosscut-colleague turned me on to this via Facebook. He said he was contemplating suicide because the software determined that he wrote like Dan Brown. Who doesn't want to write like a multi-millionaire bestselling author? A guy with self-respect or a six-ton sack of sour grapes on his back. But my advice is, if at first you get Dan Brown, try, try again.
I had to take up the challenge, so I entered the three stories I wrote for Crosscut last week.
The first was my piece on the Barefoot Bandit and why I thought he was a punk. Vintage Mossback? No. The computer says vintage Chuck Palahniuk, the guy who wrote Fight Club, only this time, I was riffing on the flight club. Okay, I'll take it.
Next up was my story on why Seattle should vote on the deep-bore tunnel. Many readers thought I was crazy. The computer: It thought I was writing science fiction. My prose style, it said, was like Arthur C. Clarke's. Perhaps the computer is a pal of Hal's. For those who don't like the tunnel vote idea, breathe easy. Clearly my column was a deftly crafted work of speculative fiction about a future that will nevercome to pass, just like 2001: A Space Odyssey.
.Lastly, I popped in my story on how to prevent future boondoggles, like the tunnel is sure to be. My suggestion was that we garnish the wages and take the assets of city council members to cover tunnel cost overruns. Of course, I'm assuming the a worst-case scenario. The computer was right on it. The software said the column was written in the style of H.P. Lovecraft. Now that is right on: the whole subject of mega-projects, their costs, and lack of accountability is weird, a genuine horror story.
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Comments:
Posted Mon, Jul 19, 7:50 p.m. Inappropriate
A reader sends this link.
I'm surprised I'm not Shakespeare!
http://nielsenhayden.com/makinglight/archives/012502.html#012502
Posted Mon, Jul 19, 11:02 p.m. Inappropriate
I noticed that Genesis 1 was written like Kurt Vonnegut, while Revelation 22 is Lewis Carroll.
(My Crosscut pieces were apparently written like David Foster Wallace. But I am certainly not alone, as http://twitter.com/swimstein/status/18808857149 noted. I mean, so does Justin Bieber, per the Toronto Star. http://bit.ly/9O1uYa)
Posted Tue, Jul 20, 9:34 a.m. Inappropriate
Funny post, Knute, and excellent reporting in the Making Light blog item you linked above. I could feel the scam in this thing but didn't take the time to run it down. I'm glad the Making Light folks did.
Gotta say, the I Write Like thing has been a very effective and fun little bit of Internet time-wasting. If a legit version comes along I'll keep entering text until someone tells me I write like Mossback. Then I can retire.
Posted Tue, Jul 20, 9:26 p.m. Inappropriate
I put in an Emily Dickenson poem--who knew she, too, writes like David Foster Wallace?
Posted Wed, Jul 21, 9:42 p.m. Inappropriate
OK, Knute, I also took the "Who do you write like?" test on Facebook. I submitted three Crosscut articles: "Stalking Anthony Bourdain in Seattle" (Chuck Palahniuk); "Free and Highly Rated - Seattle's Frye Art Museum" (David Foster Wallace); and "Trains, Planes & Ferry Boats" (Cory Doctorow). I haven't read anything by this trio of writers -- and I've never heard of the third one. Turns out he's a Canadian with a blog called craphound.com. Woof. So I took another Facebook test, "Who were you in a past life?" No guys for me this time, I ended up being Marie Antoinette, executed by guillotine at the young age of 37. Pass the cake, s'il vous plaît.