SimonDoom
Kink Lord
- Joined
- Apr 9, 2015
- Posts
- 20,132
This question is a lot like starting sentences with And and But. Technically, no, you shouldn't do that. Starting with And or But makes them dependent clauses, but in fiction it's okay to be artistic.
HOWEVER, if you also write sloppy sentences with run-ons and fragments, people are going to walk away from your work thinking you don't know what you're doing. If you use Now a whole bunch in the past tense AND you have a bunch of tense disagreements and incorrect verb forms, your artistic choice just makes your actual mistakes look much worse.
To paraphrase Roger Ebert, learn how to frame a shot correctly before you start experimenting with Dutch angles.
Doc, sorry. Nope. You are spreading misinformation! I'm a bit chagrined.
Beginning what is otherwise an independent clause/full sentence with "and" does not make it a dependent clause.
"I went to the store, and I bought some bread."
This is two independent clauses joined by "and" as a conjunction.
You could also write:
"I went to the store. And I bought some bread."
This is two complete sentences.
Most editors and publishing houses would say starting a sentence with "and" is perfectly OK.
"I went to the store, because I wanted to buy some bread."
"I went to the store when I discovered I was ought of bread."
"I went to the store until I realized that I had bought bread the day before."
THESE are examples of "and" joining an independent clause with a dependent clause, because the second clause cannot stand on its own as a sentence.
The difference here is that in the last three examples the latter clause is a subordinate clause that in some way modifies or explains, and is dependent on, the first clause, while in the first example you have two clauses that stand on their own, joined by an "and."
