Futureproofing Your Writing: How to avoid anachronisms in fiction to keep your prose timeless

Nonfiction, Reference & Language, Language Arts, Writing & Publishing, Composition & Creative Writing
Cover of the book Futureproofing Your Writing: How to avoid anachronisms in fiction to keep your prose timeless by Andrew Burt, Andrew Burt
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Andrew Burt ISBN: 9781370900640
Publisher: Andrew Burt Publication: November 25, 2016
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Andrew Burt
ISBN: 9781370900640
Publisher: Andrew Burt
Publication: November 25, 2016
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

How to avoid anachronisms in fiction to keep your prose timeless...

So you're reading along in the Bourne Ultimatum, you're with Jason Bourne on the run, he's caught sneaking out to the car—interrogated by the baddies—and boom, he says, "I'm just driving out on the highway to find a phone, that's all." He what? Doesn't he have a cell phone? While in 1991 there were no cell phones to speak of, today it's awkward for a character not to have one, and this leaves the reader feeling the story is dated, or at least wondering why such a notable absence isn't explained. Yet it could have been easily avoided.

Technology changes so fast—and changes life so fast—that if you aren't careful as a writer, your masterpiece could quickly sound dated, and needlessly rob you of readers and sales. You can't avoid technology, as that can be just as bad; though with a few careful choices of words you can lengthen the shelf-life of your work. It used to be only science fictional accounts of the future that became outdated as tomorrow rolled in, but now unless you're writing in a historical time period, the pace of change is so rapid that stories intended to be set in the modern day may be dated by the time readers see them.

Science fiction is even more prone to this problem, when fictional technologies become real—but not in the way described—or, worse, are bypassed and laughably unreal.

The good news is that, other than the Major Assumptions of your story (such as faster than light travel), chances are little of your story truly relies on you nailing down specifics about many things that might get outdated, nor would they be harmed if you described them more generically. Your story is uniquely yours anyway, so carefully sidestepping pitfalls won't hurt your story, only make it more robust. This book presents techniques to "futureproof" your writing, whether set in the distant future or the ever-changing "modern day."

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

How to avoid anachronisms in fiction to keep your prose timeless...

So you're reading along in the Bourne Ultimatum, you're with Jason Bourne on the run, he's caught sneaking out to the car—interrogated by the baddies—and boom, he says, "I'm just driving out on the highway to find a phone, that's all." He what? Doesn't he have a cell phone? While in 1991 there were no cell phones to speak of, today it's awkward for a character not to have one, and this leaves the reader feeling the story is dated, or at least wondering why such a notable absence isn't explained. Yet it could have been easily avoided.

Technology changes so fast—and changes life so fast—that if you aren't careful as a writer, your masterpiece could quickly sound dated, and needlessly rob you of readers and sales. You can't avoid technology, as that can be just as bad; though with a few careful choices of words you can lengthen the shelf-life of your work. It used to be only science fictional accounts of the future that became outdated as tomorrow rolled in, but now unless you're writing in a historical time period, the pace of change is so rapid that stories intended to be set in the modern day may be dated by the time readers see them.

Science fiction is even more prone to this problem, when fictional technologies become real—but not in the way described—or, worse, are bypassed and laughably unreal.

The good news is that, other than the Major Assumptions of your story (such as faster than light travel), chances are little of your story truly relies on you nailing down specifics about many things that might get outdated, nor would they be harmed if you described them more generically. Your story is uniquely yours anyway, so carefully sidestepping pitfalls won't hurt your story, only make it more robust. This book presents techniques to "futureproof" your writing, whether set in the distant future or the ever-changing "modern day."

More books from Composition & Creative Writing

Cover of the book The Rag-Picker's Guide to Poetry by Andrew Burt
Cover of the book Crafting Unputdownable Fiction Boxed Set by Andrew Burt
Cover of the book The Little Red Writing Book by Andrew Burt
Cover of the book Writing While Female or Black or Gay by Andrew Burt
Cover of the book A Rhetoric of Reflection by Andrew Burt
Cover of the book The New Head Teacher by Andrew Burt
Cover of the book Mein Ideengarten by Andrew Burt
Cover of the book The No Rules Handbook for Writers (know the rules so you can break them) by Andrew Burt
Cover of the book Heinlein's Rules by Andrew Burt
Cover of the book Wonderbook (Revised and Expanded) by Andrew Burt
Cover of the book The Soul of Creative Writing by Andrew Burt
Cover of the book Tell Me How It Reads by Andrew Burt
Cover of the book Writing Games by Andrew Burt
Cover of the book Melinda Camber Porter In Conversation with Joyce Carol Oates, 1987 Princeton University: ISSN Volume 1, Number 6 by Andrew Burt
Cover of the book Writing Speculative Fiction: Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Horror by Andrew Burt
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy