“Your writing voice is the deepest possible reflection of who you are. The job of your voice is not to seduce or flatter or make well-shaped sentences. In your voice, your readers should be able to hear the contents of your mind, your heart, your soul.” This quote was said by Meg Rosoff, a U.K. multiple-award winning author of several popular book such as How I Live Now and Just In Case. The quote perfectly defines the true meaning of an individual’s writing style. A writing style provides readers with a glimpse into the hearts of the authors. This voice that the author’s write in is so important that it makes a difference in their readers’ lives. It decides whether the author’s message is taken into consideration and whether this message will be remembered. An essay can start with a wonderful description like in Where Nothing Says Everything by Suzanne Berne or with powerful words like in The Algebra of Infinite Justice by Arundhati Roy. The tone or the voice of the author sets the foundation for the messages of their written pieces with the support of their diction and facts. An essay delivers its message effectively when it is written in a direct manner with emotional content sometimes than an essay written is a more in an imagistic manner. Feeling can be expressed in many ways like through music, poetry and writing. The tone in which person writes something symbolizes their thoughts. In the essay, Where Nothing Says Everything, Suzanne Berne uses a tone that is almost monotonic and depressing. This can be seen in her quote, “On a cold, damp March morning, I visited Manhattan’s financial district, a place I’d never been, to pay my respects at what used to be the World Trade Center” (Berne 282). The words “cold”, “damp” immediately bring up an image of something dark and sad in our minds. The rest of the sentence is emotional but at the same time the author seems to talk to the readers in a dead voice. This quote at the beginning of Berne’s essay does not really appeal to the readers to read further on. However, The Algebra of Infinite Justice by Arundhati Roy provides readers with a first line, “It must be hard for ordinary Ame