Today I'm excited to have debut author Margot Harrison her to share about her YA thriller THE KILLER IN ME. It sounds like a real page turner.
Here's a blurb from Goodreads:
Seventeen-year-old Nina Barrows knows all about the Thief. She’s intimately familiar with his hunting methods: how he stalks and kills at random, how he disposes of his victims’ bodies in an abandoned mine in the deepest, most desolate part of a desert.
Now, for the first time, Nina has the chance to do something about the serial killer that no one else knows exists. With the help of her former best friend, Warren, she tracks the Thief two thousand miles, to his home turf—the deserts of New Mexico.
But the man she meets there seems nothing like the brutal sociopath with whom she’s had a disturbing connection her whole life. To anyone else, Dylan Shadwell is exactly what he appears to be: a young veteran committed to his girlfriend and her young daughter. As Nina spends more time with him, she begins to doubt the truth she once held as certain: Dylan Shadwell is the Thief. She even starts to wonder . . . what if there is no Thief?
Now here's Margot!
How I Learned to Love First-Person Present Tense
“Stay away from present tense,” an agent once warned me.
“You can’t pull it off.” Several adult readers—including a librarian—have told
me they won’t read first-person present tense: it “bothers” them. I’ve seen the
format disparaged on writing forums as a “gimmick,” and called out in online
reviews as a novelty.
Yet, in young adult fiction, first-person present tense isn’t
new—or rare. Of the 40-plus YA debuts I’ve read this year, across all
subgenres, I’d guess slightly more than half are FPPT. My debut novel, The Killer in Me, is one of them.
It wasn’t easy for me to dive into FPPT after years as a fan
of third-person past. It just seemed so raw and personal—I wasn’t sure I wanted
to be that close to my characters.
Then I started getting editor rejections that pegged my
manuscript as lacking “immediacy.” While a
I soon realized that writing in FPPT wasn’t as simple as
changing the tenses: the new style nudged me to write in new ways. Here are
some things I learned along the way:
1. FPPT narration always
wants to become an interior monologue.
Don’t let anyone tell you FPPT is a new gimmick inspired by
the eternal “now” of the Internet. The form goes back (at least) to the dawn of
the twentieth century.
In college, I studied the Austrian author Arthur Schnitzler,
who pioneered the “interior monologue”
in his novellas “Lieutenant Gustl”
(1901) and “Fräulein Else” (1924). Both are FPPT narratives told from the point
of view of a young person experiencing emotional crisis—just like many YA
novels. Schnitzler cut the filtering words and presented each narrator’s stream
of consciousness—to powerful effect.
You can do the same—write what the character would be
thinking and feeling in the moment,
not how she might summarize it later. In a suspenseful scene, “Who’s that
behind me?” grabs us more than “I think I sense someone behind me.”
Just remember to edit aggressively and stay focused; present
tense isn’t an excuse for rambling (as we often do in our real-life internal
monologues).
2. Because FPPT
imitates the immediacy of a play or movie, it’s best for zeroing in on “real-time”
scenes and vignettes.
Some readers find present tense jarring when it describes a
time-span longer than a single scene (Example: “It takes me nearly a week to
figure out how wrong I am.”). Such summarizing, they claim, implies the
narrator is looking backward, and should therefore be using past tense.
It’s true that some of the most effective FPPT novels
consist of brief, vivid, you-are-there scenes with little or no exposition or
summary connecting them. (One great example is Tess Sharpe’s Far From You.)
But I don’t think writers should absolutely forbid
themselves from using exposition and summary in FPPT. Sure, past tense might seem
more logical, but every narrative form fudges the truth. Plus, we can make FPPT
exposition less awkward by presenting past time in a “montage,” or a series of
distinct moments that progress toward some conclusion. (Example: “On Thursday, waking
from uneasy dreams, I start to think I may be wrong. On Friday, when I see her
in her red dress, I know I am.”)
3. Watch all your
tenses.
When your dominant tense is present, other tenses change,
too. You generally won’t need pluperfect to refer to the past. AWKWARD: “I’m
petrified of snakes because one had bitten me last summer.” SMOOTH: “I’m
petrified of snakes because one bit me last summer.”
Are we entering a world where present-tense narratives will
dominate? Hard to say. But one thing’s for sure: Far from just a gimmick, FPPT
is a powerful tool you can use to bring your characters closer to the reader. I’m
glad I dived in.
You can find Margot at:
Website
Twitter
Goodreads
Margot generously offered a copy of THE KILLER IN ME for a giveaway. To enter, all you need to do is be a follower (just click the follow button if you’re not a follower) and leave a comment through August t6h. If your e-mail is not on your Google Profile, you must leave it in the comments to enter either contest.
If you mention this contest on Twitter, Facebook, or your blog, mention this in the comments and I'll give you an extra entry. You must be 13 years old or older to enter. This is an international giveaway.
Here's what's coming up:
Next Monday I will be off for a week as my mom and uncle are coming to town for a few days.
The Monday after that I'm interviewing debut author Bridget Hodder with a giveaway of her MG Cinderella retelling THE RAT PRINCE.
The following Monday I will be doing another Summer Fun Book Giveaway--my last for the summer.
The following Monday I plan to take off.
The final Monday in August I have a guest post by Hannah West and a giveaway of her YA fantasy KINGDOM OF ASHES AND BRIARS.
Hope to see you in two weeks!
Here's what's coming up:
Next Monday I will be off for a week as my mom and uncle are coming to town for a few days.
The Monday after that I'm interviewing debut author Bridget Hodder with a giveaway of her MG Cinderella retelling THE RAT PRINCE.
The following Monday I plan to take off.
The final Monday in August I have a guest post by Hannah West and a giveaway of her YA fantasy KINGDOM OF ASHES AND BRIARS.
Hope to see you in two weeks!