Umm...thanks, but no thanks. (NC and I don't sit comfortably.)I could link you if you want to see how I did it, but it's a flashback to a rape so it would not be a very comfortable read.
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Umm...thanks, but no thanks. (NC and I don't sit comfortably.)I could link you if you want to see how I did it, but it's a flashback to a rape so it would not be a very comfortable read.
No problem, it's not something everyone can handle. Which includes the guy in the story.Umm...thanks, but no thanks. (NC and I don't sit comfortably.)
I write stories where the narrative proceeds by revelation and discovery. So the scenes dart around, with big gaps in time and place, forcing you, the reader, to try to piece together the characters, back story and figure out wtf is going on. And my job is to keep you guessing and sufficiently entertained while you read so that you'll read to the end.
...
This final part continues my style of exposition, with the usual flashbacks, flash-forwards, scene jumps and all the other whizz-bang gimmickry I love to employ.
However, as this is the near the end of the story, I think I'll summarise, as simply as I can, the "forward" story thus far (or as much as has been revealed of it thus far), without all those time-jumps and implied facts. Feel free to skip it.
Yup! Could include a trigger warning: "Contains flashbacks - You have been warned!"
Seriously though, thanks for taking the time to respond!
...and are often regarded as a "cheat" by screenwriting gurusFlashbacks are a widely misunderstood and misused tool.
The flashback is not a shovel, it's a scalpel....and are often regarded as a "cheat" by screenwriting gurus
Great bookIf they're clearly done and they add to the story, then fine. I've just read Stonemouth by Iain Banks, which does it very well - there's references to An Incident five years ago, then the narrative switches to "When we started high school" or "A year before that fateful day that had me escaping town, I..."
It has a couple changes of date in every chapter, and a slowly evolving mystery, which makes it much more complex than a typical story with a couple flashbacks, so I wouldn't recommend that many unless you've got Banks-level experience. But an odd scene should be fine.
As she took off her overcoat and hanged it on the rack, her mind went back a few months and replayed the memories of that bizarre interview.
"I'm rather impressed," she remembered the older businesswoman say. "You definitely know your way around the web frontend and all those modern frameworks, including the one our engineers are using. It also seems like you've got a decent amount of knowledge and experience with privacy and security issues. Overall, pretty darn good..." She looked to the side. "So, what do you think, Jesse? Would Alyssa here be a worthwhile addition to the team?"
Jesse had introduced himself as the CEO, and tech was probably the only industry where he could actually look like one. The guy didn't even break into his thirties; a button-down checkered shirt was still the height of his fashion sense, and the bloodshot eyes plus a frizzy mane of brown hair on his head gave off an appearance of someone who'd just spent all night either partying or coding.
"Excellent. And I must say I appreciate what you said earlier, too, about not wanting to be a drag on Jesse's team productivity, because in this role, you would become essentially the exact opposite."
She blinked in confusion. "Huh?"
Heather's wrinkly smile grew even wider. "Well, let me explain then..."
And boy, explain she did.
Thinking back to it now, as Alyssa looked at her reflection in the floor-to-ceiling mirror in her office, she could totally understand why Jesse said she was a very promising candidate. Her qualifications were obvious and plain to everyone around, precisely because she was anything but plain.
Thank you very much for taking the time to respond, and for pointing me in the direction of your "How-To". I've left a comment after that piece explaining my thoughts, and the fact that your piece gave me a serious reminder of things that I did know, but was choosing to ignore, along with a reality check. A major rethink is necessary, I believe, into how I intend to write the piece I want to, if indeed I really do want to detract from the piece that sparked the idea.You might want to take a glance at a short How-To that I wrote.
There are a few literary techniques mentioned in it that could help you decide on how to incorporate the past events, including: Allusion, Exposition, Flashbacks, and Frame Story.
Me too. If you can't do it with words alone, maybe you shouldn't do it at all.I am dead set against using italics or some other typography to mark the flashback
Then I would have to put <i> and </i> in front and behind each paragraph of the flashback. I haven’t the patience for that.I put my flashbacks in italics.
Then I would have to put <i> and </i> in front and behind each paragraph of the flashback. I haven’t the patience for that.