Fringe Fiction Unlimited discussion
Group Questions?
>
What are your thoughts on Stories with Flashbacks throughout
date
newest »



Truth to tell, as long as the writing is good, and it all syncs up, you should be just fine.

Truth to tell, as long as the writing is good, and it all syncs up, you should be just fine.





anyways, I've used flashbacks for a few of my stories and hand no complaints. my most difficult one was about a psychotic soldier with issues (and that series deal with a lot of dreaming, memory and concept of reality ). interweaving the flashbacks (and dreams and memories) along with the present story was difficult but doable. some found it confusing at first until later it made sense. i tried as separate stories following the timeline but I had 20 years to work with and I didn't want the series any longer than what it is (and the books are thick already).
try writing the segments separately. if it's too weak on it's own find a way to weave it in that's natural and don't make it into a dream sequence. flashbacks are triggered by a defining sight, smell, phrase or even by touch. flashbacks happen due to some event that deeply effected the character, whether or not its traumatic. get to know your characters well, and once you get this flashback down it won't feel tacked on.



The flashbacks really aren't as important to forwarding the plot as they are reflecting the difference between where the character is now versus where they were in that moment one year prior.
For example (without overloading you with too much detail): The opening chapter (which I'm debating stripping) features a brief scene of my MC and her best friend in her bedroom the night before her birthday. She's convincing her BFF to go with her to sneak into her old brother's end of the year party on his college campus. It ends with her agreeing to go. Then the chapter would continue PRESENT DAY one year later, my MC's birthday....her first one without* her best friend who's death was the result of what happened at the party she dragged her to.
The odd things is I've already written most of the flashbacks first. But I'm wondering if I should simply condense it all into one prologue and go from there. And the only thing that's stopped me from just doing that straight away is because I don't necessarily want the reader to know everything that happened all at once. I kind of want to unveil each piece of the puzzle the further along her relationship gets with the male love interest because both her past and his are the same f*cked up situation but on opposite sides of the spectrum; they each offer the other a perspective that isn't black and white, which is the way they see what happened to their loved ones prior to meeting one another.


I actually thought about doing this for my latest novel but decided to just spend one chapter as a complete flashback to tie in any current chapter to the past. I also did it with my second book so I guess it's something I'm fairly used to. I have no issue with doing flashbacks I just think if it's going to be done as a back and forth type deal that it should be done correctly so that the reader doesn't get confused.
I've read a book that had lots of flashbacks and unfortunately I got confused.
I've read a book that had lots of flashbacks and unfortunately I got confused.

Agreed Nina. Flashbacks are meant to serve a purpose to tell the story in a certain way. Your right about TV too, they tell two stories and unless it ties into one another it can be confusing.

Yeah I thought the Arrow flashbacks were gonna be one straight forward flash solely on the island boy was I wrong.


I would strongly recommend Linda LeGarde Grover's books The Dance Boots and The Road Back to Sweetgrass though, if you want examples of books that make good use of alternating timeframes. Each chapter is like a short story, some of which take place in the 1970's, others in an earlier time, others in the 1990's or 2000's. She often meanders into the characters' thought processes, referring to dreams and to moments that happened earlier in the characters' lives, but it's a stylistic device and I think she did it to illustrate a particular type of storytelling style and conversational style. Her prose tends to read like someone is talking.
Like I said, I don't think that flashbacks are usually a good idea, but I'm more forgiving if it's a stream-of-consciousness type of writing style. I think those are more flexible. And even as I decry their use, I'm sure I've used them myself at some point or another.

Another good one is First and Only by Dan Abnett. An amazing timeframe filled with flashbacks. It even ends -- perfectly -- in the middle of one.
Books mentioned in this topic
First and Only (other topics)The Dance Boots (other topics)
The Road Back to Sweetgrass (other topics)
Aztec (other topics)
The Wind Through the Keyhole (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Dan Abnett (other topics)Scott Lynch (other topics)
Do any of you know of any novels (romance in particular) with story lines that switch between present day and Flashbacks???
I understand why constant flashbacks would annoy some readers because it doesn't translate as well as it would if it were the plot points for a TV show (I.e: HTGAWM; Arrow) but the story I'm writing calls for more flashbacks than the initial preface now that I'm further into it. I think the challenge is making both the past and present equally interesting because that's the usual complaint about stories that do the back and forth
Your thoughts?