I (allegedly) Write Like...

David Foster Wallace :dubious:

That can’t be right, let me try something a little longer.

Dan Brown :frowning:

From Tit-Bits From All the Most Interesting Books, Periodicals and Newspapers in the World, Dec. 3, 1881 at http://www.futilitycloset.com/

  • Leo Tolstoy

From La Belle Dame sans Merci, Keats

  • James Joyce

From The Devil’s Dictionary, Ambrose Bierce

  • H. P. Lovecraft

I pasted in a very snotty letter I wrote to local officials about planning bylaws, and got HP Lovecraft (this may be realistic :- from the officials’ response, they had indeed concluded I was an eldritch horror dwelling at the frozen edge of the Universe, that the minds of men could scarcely envisage).

I pasted in some published text from a book I cowrote for McGraw Hill, and that was apparently me in my Charles Dickens mode.

I pasted in some JK Rowling (choosing a passage with no character names :- don’t want to make it easy for them) and in fairness, JK Rowling writes like JK Rowling.

Agreed, it’s mostly nonsense.

H.P. Lovecraft
Issac Azimov
Edgar Allen Poe
Margaret Atwood
David Foster Wallace

… I am thinking this thing really just gives you a random author.

I tried: “I do not like it on a train. I do not like it in the rain.” and it said I write like Ernest Hemingway.

Pasting a couple of recent SDMB posts into it, it said I write like Margaret Atwood and David Foster Wallace.

Bwahahahaha

I just laughed out loud - I pasted 3 paragraphs from a story i’d written (no stream of consciousness whatsoever) and was told I write like James Joyce!

I got Lovecraft, Lovecraft, Lovecraft, and again Lovecraft. I do not think it is random and I do not write like Lovecraft.

Please say I don’t. Could I get a little Steinbeck ova here?

I submitted a sonnet I’d written, and it also thought I was Joyce.

Two parts of an e-mail I just wrote to an ex-girlfriend, then the entire text, yielded Stephen King, Ian Fleming, and David Foster Wallace.

A recent Facebook update gives me Leo Tolstoy.

“The Development Cycle of Formal Mentoring Programs,” a section I wrote for a massive group project recently, channels HP Lovecraft.

Sounds like it was a hell of a relationship while it lasted. :smiley:

HP Lovecraft, Neil Gaiman, and UK LeGuin for me. I think it’s keying off key vocabulary words: the piece it compared to Lovecraft contained the phrase “gaunt gothic citadel,” and the LeGuin piece mentioned dragons.

Could be, but it ruled that part of a David Foster Wallace essay was written in the style of David Foster Wallace.

Random Vinyl Turnip posts apparently resembled the writing of George Orwell, William Gibson, and Margaret Atwood.

If it had said Vinyl Turnip writes in the style of… my real name… *then *I’d have been impressed.

A particularly gibberish filled consultant’s report hit my inbox day before yesterday. I loaded a couple of representative sentences into I Write Like and it yielded a similarity with Dan Brown. Someone should be offended. I’m just not sure who.

That site does a tremendous disservice to David Foster Wallace, and it makes me sad.

I had eight representative samples handy from eight favorist novelists and fed them in. The site scored 3 out of 8:

Twain --> Twain
Conrad -> Rowling
Hemingway -> Hemingway
Kerouac -> Dan Brown
J Joyce -> J Joyce
Le Carre -> J Joyce
Heller -> Wodehouse
Dostoevsky -> Tolstoy

I pasted in part of the preface from my soon-to-be published book (don’t ask) and I came up as … David Foster Wallace. (Is that good or bad?)

Wonder if he saw the site before he… you know.

Hey, you write like Stephen King too!

Cool.

I thought Steinbeck was a boy?

I’d be scared.

One thing’s come out of this; I’ll probably read “Infinite Jest” by David Foster Wallace because of this. Though, mind you, if it’s pretentious crap that only critics could love, I won’t finish it.