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Topic : Are there any rules to follow about the narrator mixing past and present tense in writing? I'm editing a short story that's been written in the past tense, however at some points I slip up - selfpublishingguru.com

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I'm editing a short story that's been written in the past tense, however at some points I slip up and use a lot of present tense to describe some scenes. Thing is, it's happened often enough that I've started to second-guess myself when I edit it into past tense, and I'm not sure if I'm doing things correctly.

Here is an example of what I mean; this is the original paragraph:

I think weakness is the wrong word for it. He's stronger than us because of his compassion. Standing up for and reaching out to someone in need is an applaudable quality. For him to still be his way at thirty-two years old, he's more of a man than the rest of us, that’s for sure.

Here is the same paragraph with consistent past tense:

I thought weakness was the wrong word for it. He was stronger than us because of his compassion. Standing up for and reaching out to someone in need was an applaudable quality. For him to still be his way at thirty-two years old, he was more of a man than the rest of us, that’s for sure.

The first feels more natural to me, so my question is, in general, is there a reason (in terms of getting published) to not mix past and present tense like that?


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The two versions of your paragraph are saying two distinctly different things, and neither is necessarily incorrect. Let's examine them more closely:

"I think weakness is the wrong word for it." You are describing an ongoing attitude you still hold (or possibly a new thought you didn't have at the time). "I thought weakness was the wrong word for it." You are describing a particular thought you had at a given time in the past, probably directly in response to someone saying something like "He's weak." (This phrasing also tends to imply you no longer think this.) "He's stronger than us..." This is someone you still have a relationship with, and he's still stronger than you. "He was stronger than us..." but now he's dead, or gone, or weak, or you and he aren't friends any more, or this is all something that firmly happened in the past. Depending on your intent, either sentence, both, or neither could legitimately be in either tense (yielding four different variations on the same theme).

I could go on, but hopefully you get the point. Even if your story is generally in the past tense, there are some things in it that could legitimately be phrased in the present tense, thus giving them a different meaning. It's quite common --universal, in fact --for past events to have an impact on the present. Language is flexible enough to reflect that relationship. What should be avoided is mixing tenses for no good reason, as in "I walked up the stairs. Now I'm pausing at the top. Then I went back down."


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A narrator can mix up past and present tense without issues, especially if the narrator is telling a story now about events that happened in the past, but is giving their thoughts as to what they think now after the events have occurred. This way, you can disagree with actions taken by characters, or demonstrate certain actions were carried out based on wrong information etc. It's a very useful trick that can help the reader understand that characters have made the wrong assumptions.

Consider your two different versions: in the first, the narrator sounds like they're making a judgment in the present tense about an event that happened. In the second example, the narrator is revealing what they though at the time of the event itself (or they're revealing what someone else thought at the time).

There is no issue with either interpretation, but it only makes sense depending on which is correct in terms of your narrator's relationship to the story itself i.e. are they involved in the events, or are they telling a story that they know about, but weren't involved in.

The only way this would prevent getting published is if it becomes so muddled that it's never clear when the narrator made their judgment, or if you mix up when the judgment was made and subsequent actions e.g. in one part of the story you suggest the narrator is making a judgment in retrospect, but later in the story, the narrator or someone carries out an act in the past based on that judgment.


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Using present tense for some parts of a story and not for others can be very effective - especially if the narrator is writing in a style that tells a story and adds asides reflecting the narrator's views as they tell it. For example :

John walked down the road and went into the newsagent's shop. He asked
for a copy of the "Daily Mail" and made a face as Nasir, the
newsagent, handed it to him. That's John all over. He hates the word
"xenophobic", but mainly because it's Greek.

Since you haven't jumped immediately to the idea that something like this is going on it's either not, or it hasn't been done effectively.

If you have the chance to ask the author why they chose present tense for some parts and not others, this would be worth doing. Editing to correct an error in the tense is very different from editing to bring out a style.


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