skillet
a frying pan
- Joined
- Jan 17, 2020
- Messages
- 211
- Points
- 83
Tbh I think present tense and past tense plays a big role in setting the tone for your story, too. The jarring-ness of present tense is also what makes present tense so enticing sometimes-- it can give your words a more gritty quality (?) and introduce a kind of surreal sense of being (?) that can make (or break) your story. I think of it as a similar choice to choosing to speak in first or third person perspective.
Using an example from some of the posts above, I feel a huge difference between the following two sentences:
1. "This coffee sucks," I said, frowning. I chucked the whole thing into the bin and sighed.
2. "This coffee sucks," I say, frowning. I chuck the whole thing into the bin and sigh.
(maybe unpopular opinion: there's nothing more to present tense than just changing past to present....)
It might be because present-tense is more associated with second-person perspective, but it just makes the story feel more... real, like you're in the moment more, as some others said above. Eh, might just be me though. I enjoy that when done well, and I've read quite a few that did it well. :D
...I feel like I just re-articulated what everyone above me said
Using an example from some of the posts above, I feel a huge difference between the following two sentences:
1. "This coffee sucks," I said, frowning. I chucked the whole thing into the bin and sighed.
2. "This coffee sucks," I say, frowning. I chuck the whole thing into the bin and sigh.
(maybe unpopular opinion: there's nothing more to present tense than just changing past to present....)
It might be because present-tense is more associated with second-person perspective, but it just makes the story feel more... real, like you're in the moment more, as some others said above. Eh, might just be me though. I enjoy that when done well, and I've read quite a few that did it well. :D
...I feel like I just re-articulated what everyone above me said