First-person past tense: This is my favorite way to be told a story. I grew up reading K. A. Applegate’s Animorphs series and I loved getting
into the narrator’s heads and seeing the story told from his or her
point-of-view. It’s a limiting way to
tell a story, but I find that that makes it more real and you can achieve some
amazing depth in philosophy and character growth. The
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain is an excellent example of
this, and was by far the best thing I read in high school.
First-person present tense: This one
annoys a lot of readers. I’m usually
okay with it, but I will admit that in narrating stories, it feels
unnatural. We’re used to stories being
told as if they were history; being told as if the story is happening now is jarring and takes some getting
used to.
Second-person: I won’t say present tense, because I’ve never
seen second-person being written in any other way. This tense is best-known for being used in
the Choose Your Own Adventure stories
and it is fun because it makes the reader a participant. It seems to have few other outlets, although
I have also seen it used effectively in David Klass’s You Don’t Know Me.
Third-person limited: The most
common way to tell a story these days.
It may be third-person, but it’s told strictly from the point-of-view of
one character, so that everything told is colored by that character’s
perspective. I’ve also found it to be
the easiest way to write fiction as well.
Third-person omniscient: This used
to be more popular. In this one, there
are no secrets from the reader, but there can be secrets from the
characters. The reader is privy to all
the motives, actions, and thoughts of every character in the story all
throughout the narrative. This is a very
demanding way to read and to write. The
reader has to keep a lot of information in their heads, and the writer has to
be consistent or the danger of confusing the reader is higher.
Third-person present tense: This tense
annoys me more than any other, and a lot of that is because it’s the one I’m
least familiar with. I almost didn’t
make it through the first chapter of Black
House by Stephen King and Peter Straub for this very thing. It had the effect of distancing me from the
characters and the story rather than making it immediate. I’m glad I stuck with it but it took a lot of
getting used to.
Glad to know I'm not the only person who takes narrative tense so seriously. There have been times I have used the word "hate" in regards to some of them. My bad. Since then I have learned to be more open-minded about tense, but my favorite is and will probably always be third-person limited. I prefer reading it and writing it. ;)
ReplyDeleteI know how I feel about third-person limited, but I have to ask, why do you prefer both reading and writing in that tense? Also, what made second place? And what's the worst narrative tense for you, and why? (The question is for both reading and writing, if you can separate the two.)
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