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Thursday, May 15, 2014

American English and British English, and Learning to Write Both By Stephanie Osborn

Hello, MB4 friends!

Today I'm honored to welcome back our good friend Stephanie Osborn, who has just released the fifth book in her stellar Sherlock Holmes series. I love these books and can't wait to read this one!

Please help me give Stephanie a warm welcome, and enjoy her piece today. ;o)

Aaron Lazar
www.lazarbooks.com


 http://www.Stephanie-Osborn.com
copyright 2014, Stephanie Osborn

I’m sure you’ve all seen it.

We in America would say, “I don’t recognize this caller ID on my cellphone; I thought this app specialized in emphasizing identification. Could you wake me up at seven in the morning? Everything has been taken care of, but I have to run over and see Mom before the announcement is publicly known.”

But a Brit would say the same thing like this: “I don’t recognise this caller ID on my mobile; I thought this app specialised in emphasising identification. Would you knock me up at seven in the morning? It’s all sorted, but I have to pop over and see me Mum before the announcement is publically known.”

It’s the difference between the American version of English, and the British version of the same language. Sometimes people who travel back and forth between the two countries — the US and the UK — have been known to remark, “We speak the same language, but we don’t.”

And the difference encompasses terminology, slang, and even spelling.

Did you know that J.K. Rowling was made to change the name of the very first book in the Harry Potter series before it could be published in the USA? The original title, the title you’ll find on bookstore shelves in London, is Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone. But publishers felt that Americans might not recognize the alchemical reference, and so it was changed to Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone. And you may, or may not, be familiar with the use of “trainers” to mean athletic shoes, or “jumper” to refer to a pullover sweater. Cell phones are “mobiles” and refrigerators, regardless of brand, are “Frigidaires.” (I suppose this is analogous to our referring to all disposable facial tissues as “Kleenex” and cotton swabs as “Q-Tips.”)

Americans may call it a plow, but Britons call it a plough — that was even a major clue that Holmes found in one of the original adventures, denoting the suspect wasn’t British as he claimed. There is, it seems, and has been for something like a century and a half at the least, a tendency for Americans to eliminate so-called silent letters and spell more phonetically than our British counterparts. But at least Sir Arthur Conan Doyle only had to write in one version thereof.

When I started writing the Displaced Detective series, which has been described as, “Sherlock Holmes meets The X-Files,” I made a deliberate decision: If the speaker was American, dialogue (and later, thoughts and even scenes from that character’s point of view) would be written in American English. If the speaker (thinker, observer) was from the United Kingdom, dialogue etc. would be written in British English. This has held true right down to the book currently being released, A Case of Spontaneous Combustion, book 5 in the series (with at least 3 more in work, and more in the planning stages).

The series itself traces the exploits of Sherlock Holmes — or one version of Holmes, at least — when he is inadvertently yanked from an alternate reality in which he exists in Victorian Europe, into modern, 21st Century America. Because in his particular alternate reality, he and Professor Moriarty were BOTH supposed to die at Reichenbach, if he is returned, he must die. So he wisely opts to stay put and come up to speed on the modern world. Working with Dr. Skye Chadwick, her continuum’s equivalent to Holmes and the Chief Scientist of Project Tesseract (the program responsible for his accidental transition), Holmes ends up being asked to investigate unusual and occasionally outrĂ© situations.

In his latest foray, after an entire English village is wiped out in an apparent case of mass spontaneous combustion, London contacts The Holmes Agency to investigate. Holmes goes undercover to find a terror ring. In Colorado, Skye battles raging wildfires and mustangs, believing Holmes has abandoned her. Holmes must discover what caused the horror in Stonegrange and try to stop the terrorists before they unleash their bizarre weapon again, all the while wondering if he still has a home in Colorado.

And the cast of characters includes an American FBI agent, several members of the US military, two entire units of MI-5, and more. All of whom have to be rendered in their appropriate version of English.

Simple, you say? Just set Word to use the British English dictionary.

Right. Except then Skye, Agent Smith, Colonel Jones, and the other Americans would then be speaking Brit.

“So set both dictionaries operational,” you suggest.

Great idea. I’d love to. But Word doesn’t have that option — the two dictionaries would conflict. And even if it could use both, how would it know whether an American or an Englishman were speaking? More, one of those characters — Holmes himself — actually uses a somewhat archaic form of British English, in that he is a man of the Victorian era, and speaks in such fashion. So I am really using three different forms of English.

Well, the end result is simply that I have to make sure I read back through the manuscript very carefully, looking for places where either I’ve slipped up, or autocorrect replaced the British with the American equivalent (which it does every chance it gets). I’m also pleased that my publisher has assigned me a regular editor who is quite familiar with the British version of English, to include the euphemisms, exclamations, and general slang. She’s been amazingly helpful, and I do my best to stay up to speed on the latest version of slang in both the US and the UK.

So what has been the response?

Well, I’ve had one or two Amazon reviews refer to “misspellings,” and there’s one venerated author (of whom I like to refer as one of the “Grand Old Men of Science Fiction”) who is currently reading the first couple of books in the series and is amazed that I even attempted to pull such a thing off, let alone that I’m doing it.

But other than that, it’s rather strange; not one reader has volunteered the observation that I am writing in two different forms of the English language. Yet the sense among fans of the series is that I have captured Doyle’s tone and style, despite the fact that I do not use a first-person Watson narrative, despite the fact that we see what Holmes is thinking, at least to a point.

I believe the reason is because, subconsciously, readers are picking up on the fact that Holmes speaks, thinks, and observes in proper, Victorian, British English. And even when referring to more modern conveniences, maintains a solid British presence. Consistently. Throughout.

And that’s precisely what I intended, from the very beginning.

I love it when a plan comes together.

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00K98AI6Y/

About Stephanie Osborn:


Stephanie Osborn, the Interstellar Woman of Mystery, is a veteran of more than 20 years in the civilian space program, with graduate and undergraduate degrees in four sciences: astronomy, physics, chemistry and mathematics, and she is “fluent” in several more, including geology and anatomy. She has authored, co-authored, or contributed to more than 20 books, including the celebrated science-fiction mystery, Burnout: The mystery of Space Shuttle STS-281. She is the co-author of the “Cresperian Saga” book series, and currently writes the critically acclaimed “Displaced Detective” series, described as “Sherlock Holmes meets The X-Files.” In addition to her writing, the Interstellar Woman of Mystery now happily “pays it forward,” teaching math and science through numerous media including radio, podcasting and public speaking, as well as working with SIGMA, the science-fiction think tank.
Website:

6 comments:

  1. Hi, Stephanie! It's a pleasure to have you back on MB4 today. Welcome! And I loved your article. I have a critique partner from the UK - it took us a while to sort out all the differences between US and UK styles - including simple things like using single or double quotes for dialog (single in the UK!), etc. And my Beta reader in Canada was trained to always put commas on the outside of quoted words, completely opposite to my US training. It's really interesting to discover that what is "right" is truly relative to where you live! Happy writing and good luck with this new book. ;o) - Aaron

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  3. I have to disagree with some of the quotes made by Stephanie. I would never say ' knock me up,' and the only people who might are teenagers. Likewise, 'me mum,' again something a teenager is more likely to say than an adult. As for 'jumper,' that is a term that is now rarely used, except by people in their 70s; sweater is the accepted norm.

    Yes, there are differences in our common language, and not just in spelling and grammar. Ciara Ballintyne wrote an interesting article which she kindly allowed me to reproduce on the news page my website about the challenges British authors face when marketing our novels on sites in the USA. Like, Ciara, I've never met anyone who doesn't know there is a difference, and yet it is common for reviewers to complain about what they perceive as spelling and grammatical errors. Readers in the UK are far more tolerant of American authors than Americans seem of their British counterparts.

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  4. Congratulations on the release of your new addition to the Displaced Detective Series, Stephanie. I have adored all of your works since I first started reading them a couple of years ago. I'll be curling up with this one this weekend, and am already looking forward to the next installment!

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  5. Thank you, Aaron, thank you, Christi! I'm very happy about this new book release!

    As for what I fondly term "Brit-isms," I have a fair number of expat Brits as friends, and there is nothing that I used in the examples in the article (or for that matter, in my books) that I have not heard these mature adults use themselves. So I conclude that I am reasonably accurate in my language depictions.

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  6. Stephanie, I omitted to say I am British, and while I have travelled extensively in the USA, I remain a resident of the UK. I don't know if your expat friends have returned to their homeland recently, but I can assure you my comments are accurate.

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