I submitted about a page of text in my earlier test. Then I resubmitted the last 3 paragraphs separately:
I write like
Anne RiceI Write Like by Mémoires,
Mac journal software.
Analyze your writing! Then again, I posted from later in the same piece and got Anne Rice again, so maybe there is something too it.
I consider the Anne Rice comparison to be a compliment, actually, because although I am not fond of her subject (vampire melodrama) and some of her statements as a public figure seem a little crazy, I do feel that she is stylistically strong (from the one book of hers I ever read.)
ETA: OK, I am doing this paragraph by paragraph in the same 3 pages of text.
Paragraph 1:
I write like
Vladimir NabokovI Write Like by Mémoires,
Mac journal software.
Analyze your writing! Paragraph 2:
I write like
Charles DickensI Write Like by Mémoires,
Mac journal software.
Analyze your writing! Paragraph 3:
I write like
Ian FlemingI Write Like by Mémoires,
Mac journal software.
Analyze your writing! Paragraph 4:
I write like
Stephen KingI Write Like by Mémoires,
Mac journal software.
Analyze your writing! First section of dialog:
I write like
Oscar WildeI Write Like by Mémoires,
Mac journal software.
Analyze your writing! Paragraph 5:
I write like
Anne RiceI Write Like by Mémoires,
Mac journal software.
Analyze your writing! Paragraph 6:
I write like
Margaret MitchellI Write Like by Mémoires,
Mac journal software.
Analyze your writing! Second section of dialog:
I write like
Anne RiceI Write Like by Mémoires,
Mac journal software.
Analyze your writing! Third section of dialog:
I write like
James JoyceI Write Like by Mémoires,
Mac journal software.
Analyze your writing! Paragraph 7 (final paragraph)
I write like
Anne RiceI Write Like by Mémoires,
Mac journal software.
Analyze your writing! This is a fairytale. Every time I mentioned the queen, it gave me Anne Rice. I am intrigued enough to experiment further.