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Epilogues and prologues: like or dislike?

Sir Terry Pratchett does some excellently funny footnotes. I have all the time in the world for those. I don't like those which could easily be expressed in parenthesis. They become an affectation then.

Unfortunately, as I like fantasy, that seems to be the worst genre for prologues. I forget the title of one I picked up in the library, but it had a real interesting premise. The prologue, though, was around 30 pages long, about how this world used to be, with this character and that character who did this and that. I hadn't a clue who they were, didn't care, and put the book back after reading two pages.
I now go straight to chapter one, and ignore the prologue altogether.

I read a lot fantasy too David and I agree they seem to be the worst for it although recently I read a book which had a prologue as the story of how the parents got together and then we met the child. To be honest if you didn't read it, it wouldn't of mattered but I felt more attached to the main character because of it.
epilogues now are a different story. i sometimes want to know the life story of a character and find out how they lived out the rest of their life after the novel but for some reason even then i find the epilogues to be unsatisfying at best.

Footnotes as humorous asides, prologues and epilogues, YES! YES!
But in self defence the only prologue I've written was 4 lines long, and the epilogues are no more than half a page...


Basically, in my opinion they should be like bonus features so you can read them or leave them out as you please.

My favourite epilogue so far goes to Cassie Clare's Clockwork Princess which was simply amazing!!!
I also loved the epilogue to Harry Potter which I nearly forgot to put in, I thought it ended the series perfectly but I would have loved to have known what jobs they all took as adults.
However I also agree that sometimes they can leave you a little disappointed, I loved the Twilight Saga however Stephanie Meyers Breaking Dawn springs to mind :( not the best when it comes to the happily ever after which I found a little too predictable.
I still feel a story is better with them, as for the prologue I think if you are retelling a story from the past and bringing the reader to the present in chapter 1 then again I don't mind them.

JKR did an epilogue?


Prologues are just sloppy storytelling IMHO.
And Pratchett writes the best damn footnotes(*) on the disc.
* Yup.

you do remember i'm a huge slasher in the HP fandom? why would i even accept that epilogue?

I'd never use an epilogue to kill off a character, though. Rather, to briefly re-set the stage, and possibly set it up for a sequel.

I'd never use an epilogue to kill off a character, though. Rather, to briefly re-set the stage, and possibly set it up for a sequel."
But that just makes it a variant of the much-detested sample first chapter, which is a whole category of crime in its own right.


Not necessarily. A first chapter, at least in my mind, is a completely different kind of writing than an epilogue. Chapters - including first chapters - should have a narrative arc with a beginning, middle, and end (which, in my case, is often a cliff-hanger). An epilogue is a much more settling of the dust, with pointers to where the next novel might be going. Not a real narrative arc in its own right.

When I've been doing the Excellent Prismatic Spray as editor I've put in lots of footnotes (because Jack Vance wasn't too proud to, nor am I :-) but they're mainly to allow the editor to rail at the writers or insult the universe in general.It's also a magazine format
For epilogues, I've not formally done an epilogue, but in my first book there are 400 words that lead into the second book, then the book finishes with a further 300 words which does 'end' the tale, but only rounds off the story for someone who has been dead during the course of the book anyway :-)
The other books are all free-standing so I've never had to use a bridge.




There may be good ones out there, but I haven’t come across any myself, as yet.
To me a prologue just seems to be laz..."
Oooh dear. You're gonna love The Third Rule then :(





Ignite could tell you.

There may be good ones out there, but I haven’t come across any myself, as yet.
Oooh dear. You're gonna love The Third Rule then :(
I did say, as yet. Seems they're not all bad, and maybe it's just because I read a lot of fantasy, where they've read almost as an abridged version of a prequel. I'd sooner just dive into the story, is all, rather than have the basis for it explained, even if it takes a while for the narrative to make sense. I like that sense of realisation, say halfway through a book, when I realise something is done a certain way because, which only comes about via clever exposition.

As for prologues and epilogues: I stand guilty in using them. I agree that they can be overused, but I felt that I had to as I'd written the main body of my book in a limited third person style, but wanted to bookend it with scenes away from the main character. The only way I could see that I could do that is by using both a dreaded prologue and epilogue.

I'm wondering whether to have a short 'information dump' at the end so people can ignore it, refer to it if they want, but most importantly it doesn't take up any of the 'look inside' part of the kindle version

1. if you are like most authors, they simply expect you to know it from the first book and read it in order and if you don't then its your own damn fault for not reading the first book frankly
2. wove it into your text expertly. a few people tend to not re-cap but throw in gentle reminders in expert ways throughout the text. maybe its a new character asking a question and the others sharing an injoke about the reaction of another character before or something even a bit more subtle. the problem is that if people read all your books in a series they aren't gonna want to hear the same damn description many many times. this is one of the worst things a serial author can do IMHO.


It's also been fun to have readers trying to guess which of the characters in the stories Lady Quill is!!!

Thanks for the comment, it's been taken on board.
I have tried to do two, worked stuff in again, and I'd like to have the Chutzpah to do the first and just assume that it's their fault if they don't know.
It's just that whilst I don't like info dumps myself and who wants to read them with every book, I'd be worried that the readers might get a bit feed up of yet another explanation about why no one but an idiot connects one computer to another :-(

1. if you are like most aut..."
I agree with Elle's second option. Let the characters reveal the exposition in piece meal fashion. I think most readers have the intelligence to realise that if something doesn't make sense it will do at some point in the story. Brandon Sanderson's Mistborn: The Final Empire is a perfect example. In the 2nd book, The Well of Ascension, there is no epilogue at all, but through the narrative and dialogue we learn gradually what happened in book one, plus gain an understanding of how the mistborn get their power. Because this info is fed gradually throughout the story,the reader doesn't switch off.

Crime novelists quite often start with a prologue where the villain in the story attacks a victim. I like that cause it sets the mood for the book and shows what's to come but it wouldn't have the Same impact if it was just slotted in to the story and its not really first chapter material cause the main character isn't being introduced.
I think you are all being very hard on prologues and epilogues.

Epilogues just take the mystery from a book sometimes or they are useless but there are good ones.
(JKR made me very bitter over epilogues in general, I have to admit)
Books mentioned in this topic
The Well of Ascension (other topics)One Small Step for the Man from U.N.D.E.A.D. (other topics)
Penny Kilkenny Saves The Day (other topics)
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There may be good ones out there, but I haven’t come across any myself, as yet.
To me a prologue just seems to be lazy writing, and can even put me off reading a book. I much prefer any necessary back story to be filtered into the body of the book.
All epilogues I’ve read have been a waste of time and add nothing to the story at all. If the story has ended, then it’s ended. One book I read recently, went on to tell in a very brief manner, what the characters did with the rest of their lives: X married Y; Z went to university. It was a real anti-climax, and prompted me to post this.