deborah: Kirkus Reviews: OM NOM NOM BRAINS (kirkus)
deborah ([personal profile] deborah) wrote2011-05-28 11:14 am

what makes you tense?

I have no objection to present tense narration in any single instance, but oh, my kingdom for a book written in past tense.

Dear authors and publishers: writing everything in the present tense will not give your book the success of Hunger Games. PLEASE STOP.
libskrat: Truly the way of enlightenment is like unto half a mile of broken glass. (enlightenment is broken glass)

[personal profile] libskrat 2011-05-28 05:07 pm (UTC)(link)
Is this where I admit I put down Brightness Falls from the Air midway through because the present tense was so jarring?
rantingnerd: Earth-Moon (Default)

[personal profile] rantingnerd 2011-05-30 08:45 pm (UTC)(link)
This is more and more common with what I've been reading. Sometimes it works (I barely noticed with Hunger Games), sometimes it doesn't.

I wonder how much is the influence of screenplays and/or the desire to get the work optioned.
aveleh: Close up picture of a vibrantly coloured lime (Default)

[personal profile] aveleh 2011-06-01 03:17 am (UTC)(link)
Yes. Yes. Yes. Here's a hint - if your choices are so noticeable that they pull me out of the story (and it's not to GUSH), then it's the wrong choice.
kumquatmay: (Default)

[personal profile] kumquatmay 2011-06-01 09:34 pm (UTC)(link)
I think you're reading the wrong books. I just picked up 10 random books on my shelf, pubbed and prepub, and not one was present tense.

I have to say, I see the same amount of submissions with narration in present tense after Hunger Games that I saw beforehand. I don't know anyone making that choice to ape Suzanne Collins in that aspect consciously.

I think it's tucked away somewhere in some "how to write YA" website or SCBWI handout or something.