Bruce Beckham's Blog - Posts Tagged "rabbit"

The present tense

I'm currently reading How Novels Work by John Mullan.

It's a detailed treatise on structure and style and that sort of thing. Quite interesting though.

Something I've come around to is writing in the present tense. Not everyone's favourite, I know, but it's such a relief as a writer not to know the outcome!

Of course, you might know the outcome - but in past tense narration it's obvious to the reader that you must. Writing (and reading) in the present tense is a more filmic experience - events unfold in real time and can take both parties by surprise.

Mullan refers to this 'much rarer' tense, and cites as a good example John Updike's Rabbit novels - near the top of my all-time favourites list, and a collection I must now revisit.
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Published on March 06, 2014 23:45 Tags: bruce-beckham, how-novels-work, john-mullan, john-updike, present-tense, rabbit

No tense like the present

“I am only 16% into the book, and I am very, very irritated by the use of the present tense.”

Yes – it’s a review of my novel, Murder in School, taken from Amazon’s British website. (One star, naturally.)

I’m afraid I do write in the present tense, and ‘deservedly’ lose a percentage of readers!

But there is some method in this apparent madness.

It all began when I read John Updike’s Rabbit is Rich.

I became totally hooked by the long opening description in which car dealer Harry ‘Rabbit’ Angstrom watches contentedly from his showroom window as Middle America drives by, guzzling gas, soon to be queuing for his miserly Toyotas.

My reading experience could best be described as ‘filmic’ – I felt like I was in a movie, standing right beside Harry, watching, wondering what was going to happen next. I didn’t know, he didn’t know – but more intriguingly, neither it seemed did Updike.

Then the penny dropped. I thought, “Hey – this is the present tense!”

Like a blinding flash of light it struck me that here is the way to narrate a mystery. (Because, frankly, how can you honestly narrate a mystery in the past tense, when you know the outcome?)

I tried it – and made a second remarkable discovery. Not only as narrator can you convincingly pretend not to know the outcome – you don’t actually need to know it at all! You can wait until your characters provide the solution.

So, if you ever guess one of my whodunits in the first 25,000 words – congratulations! You beat me to it!
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Published on February 02, 2016 10:16 Tags: beckham, past-tense, present-tense, rabbit, updike, whodunit