I've been experiencing an odd phenomenon. Characters are talking to me
in first person and (get this) present tense. Think about that. First
person. Okay, not so very strange. But present tense? Who does
that? I have noticed it's a trend in YA literature, and indeed the
13-year-old girl in my brain told me her story that way. (Note to self,
start shopping that manuscript.) But those are stories told from the POV
of teens, and there's a large enough part of me that still remembers
middle and high schools (gods help me) that this makes sense to me. Show
me a teen who isn't living in the moment, and I'll show you a teen who
has deeper issues than getting their homework done or whether or not to
go to the dance. But adults? That's a different animal all together. Of
course that's how we experience life, but fictional characters don't
have to. They can have the luxury of having their end, or their
destination, or what have you be a known quantity from the beginning. In
fact, a lot of times that's preferable from the writer's point of view.
This whole present tense thing has got me utterly puzzled.
On the other hand, at least one of the voices in my head is finally
talking and making sense, so I guess I should be glad for small favours,
right? Let's hope he gets chatty today at the coffee shop because I
have two hours to fill there and it'll be awfully lonely if he clams up
on me.
10 May 2011
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