Info about the Portal system.
Dear Michelle, and Daniel, too. Re tense: I have a real thing about hating present tense, probably caused by having a bunch of teeny-boppers (I was the only one in the room over 30, including the "professor") tell me I wasn't "forward thinking enough" because all MY stories were written in past tense and theirs were ALL written in present That was in a 1980s University Writing Class. Now of course, with people like Lisa Scottoline writing whole books in present tense, it has become passe to the academics.However, I like the distinction of having dialog in present and narrative in past, so the reader doesn't get mixed up on what is said aloud and what isn't. So if the book Michelle is planning were mine (and it's not!) I'd use the general consensus of Present tense for dialog, past tense for narrative, and past perfect tense for anything that happened before the story or scene's present time.One suggestion for helping the reader along would be to use Datelines at the beginnings of scenes. Just the date and place, on a line above the beginning of a scene. I once did a novella with two first person viewpoint characters and helped the reader by setting the viewpoint character's name in bold type at the beginning of each scene. Just so they could keep up with who "I" was for the nonce. I wrote that nearly 30 years ago and my fellow-students "loved" it, but i don't think I'd choose to write a story with two first-person viewpoint characters NOW. "Then and Now" plots are hard to write, but they are well worth the trouble. Book examples include ANATOMY OF A MURDER. A movie to watch might be EDDIE AND THE CRUISERS, an oldie, but a goodie unless you HATE the Beaver Brown Band. I think they used datelines even in the movie to orient the viewer to the flashback scenes. As long as the reader isn't confused by the finished product, write your book any darned way that feels right to you. There's NO wrong way to do it, as long as you Write.arline
Peter Robinon's 60's laced Piece of My Heart was a good read. Two cops working nearly 40 years apart. Both done in 3rd person past as I recall. I wouldn't want to try a book like that without some bare bones outlining at least.EricI just read that. Yes, very good book and well handled, though the details already escape me. Ingrid