𓆰 Astrology for Writers | Part 6
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If your Mercury is in Capricorn, in the 10th house, or tied to Saturn, writing can feel slow and deliberate. You don’t just say things, you go over them, question them, and reshape them until they feel right. There’s a constant pressure to be clear and precise. At first, it can feel like you’re holding yourself back but later, it becomes your strength. You choose your words carefully, and for that reason, they carry weight.
Genres: literary fiction, essays, long-form narratives
Examples: Joan Didion, "The Year of Magical Thinking" (2005); Wallace Stegner, Crossing to Safety (1987)
If your Moon is in Gemini, in the 3rd house, or tied to Mercury, you tend to run your feelings through words. You’re not just feeling something, you’re already thinking about it at the same time. Your mind keeps talking, even when you’re alone. That shows in how you write. It sounds like someone speaking, like thoughts happening in real time, sometimes going around the point before getting there. It feels natural, like you’re working it out as you go.
Genres: contemporary fiction, dialogue-driven narratives, essays
Examples: Nora Ephron, "Heartburn" (1983); Zadie Smith, "White Teeth" (2000)
If Mercury is in Scorpio, in the 8th house, or tightly aspected by Pluto, you don’t trust what’s visible. You write what sits underneath. Tension, control, unspoken motives. Your stories don’t explain everything, they imply it. There’s intensity in your voice because you don’t look away.
Genres: psychological fiction, noir, introspective prose
Examples: Donna Tartt, "The Secret History" (1992); Bret Easton Ellis, "American Psycho" (1991)
If your Sun or Mercury connects to Uranus, or sits in Aquarius or the 11th house, your writing may be observant, not immersive. You notice patterns, contradictions, and the way people function inside systems. Even personal stories expand into something collective. Structure may not be linear, but the perspective is sharp.
Genres: dystopia, social commentary, speculative fiction
Examples: Aldous Huxley, "Brave New World" (1932); Kazuo Ishiguro, "Never Let Me Go" (2005)
If your Moon is in Taurus, in the 2nd house, or connected to Venus, you don’t write emotions directly. You translate them into texture, space, atmosphere. Things are felt before they’re understood. Your writing slows down time instead of pushing it forward.
Genres: slice of life, descriptive fiction, slow narratives
Examples: Banana Yoshimoto, "Moshi moshi" (2014); Peter Mayle, "A Year in Provence" (1989)
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