5 Reasons You Should Consider Writing Your Memoir in Present Tense | Jane Friedman

5 Reasons You Should Consider Writing Your Memoir in Present Tense

Image: the viewer looks down at a pair of shoes that are standing in a circle that's stenciled on the road along with the words "You are here."
Photo by Fallon Michael on Unsplash

Today’s post is by author Gina DeMillo Wagner, author of Forces of Nature.


When my memoir Forces of Nature was on submission with publishers, one editor said she loved the story, but couldn’t get past the fact that I had written it in present tense. In her mind, I’d broken a universal rule: Memoir is about the past and therefore should always be past tense. I respectfully disagreed (and sold the book to a different publisher who shared my vision).

From the very beginning, I felt my story demanded to be told in the present. The memoir takes place in the aftermath of my brother’s sudden death and follows my quest for answers and understanding. The prose has an immersive quality as I navigate complicated grief, investigate his cause of death, and eventually find my footing and place in the world.

Still, present tense was a risk and a technical challenge. I couldn’t approach the narrative with hindsight, though I did achieve distance and clarity. I borrowed tools from my journalism training like datelines to orient the reader to time and place. I distinguished between myself as author, as narrator, and as protagonist. Throughout the writing process, I kept in mind several cinematic, propulsive memoirs I’ve read and loved that also used present tense. I knew it could be done.

Here’s the thing: The best memoirs are not simply a chronicle of events. They are vivid, nuanced, meaningful stories. And there are myriad ways to tell a story. Present tense is just one approach. It’s tough to execute and doesn’t suit every writer or every memoir (or every editor!). But here are a few reasons to give it a try:

1. It lends immediacy and intimacy.

Memoirs are personal, but they should also be universal. You want your reader to drop into the story alongside you, and present tense is an invitation. It lends a sense of immediacy. It engages the reader and propels them through your story. They become your co-conspirator or fellow documentarian, emotionally invested in the plot of your life. In effect, you’re telling the audience: This is happening right here, right now, and you’re here with me in the midst of it all. Together, we’ll consider the plot and make meaning of it.

2. It mirrors the experience of grief and trauma.

Anyone who has experienced grief or trauma knows that it never really goes away or becomes a thing of the past. Our nervous systems hold onto the sensations and emotions as if they’re happening in the here and now. Details and memories double back on themselves. They grip us in surprising ways. Since so many memoirs deal in grief and trauma, it makes sense that we would write about it in the present. It’s a technique that gives readers access to the interiority of pain and lays bare emotions on the page.

3. It keeps you rooted in scene.

Maintaining present tense helps you avoid the boundless, blow-by-blow retelling of events: This happened, and then this happened, and then… Not to mention, without the distance of time, it can be easier to show rather than tell. There’s something visceral, almost electric, about sensory details when you read them in present tense. It keeps the author (and reader) grounded in scene.

4. There is plenty of room for reflection.

One of the biggest arguments I see against writing in present tense is that it makes it hard to reflect on your experience or offer the kind of insight and exposition that makes memoir valuable. Yet, our perspective on life isn’t static. It evolves, and it can evolve on the page. The search for patterns and connections can happen in real time.

A reflective voice asks, “So what?” It reaches beneath the surface for deeper meaning. The narrator holds a mirror to herself and her experiences and looks for the truth of it, teases out the threads, finds the subtlety. And that can happen in present, past, or future tense.

How? In present tense, you can signal to your reader when you’re reflecting. You might offer little clues like brushstrokes: “Years from now I’ll realize…” or “In my memory, this is the first time that I…” It’s akin to breaking the fourth wall. Done sparingly, it allows the reader to come to the same realizations alongside you or even develop their own, which lends universality to your story.

5. You’ll learn to trust yourself as an author.

You might try writing a draft in present tense and love it. Or you might hate it. It could crack the story wide open. Or in the end, it may not offer the flexibility you need or the structure to contain the story you want to tell. So be it. Even if you scrap the draft, I’m willing to bet your writing will improve thanks to this exercise. You may discover a sharpness, depth, and nuance that wasn’t there before.

Share on:
Subscribe
Notify of
guest

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

5 Comments
oldest
newest most voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
LINDA MOORE KURTH

Yes, first-person!

I’d been struggling with my memoir, “God, the Devil, and Divorce,” taking it to my critique group week after week. Then one day I had an epiphany. At the next meeting, I began reading. “Wait! Stop! This is so much better! What did you do? … Oh, you rewrote it in first-person! Your story is coming to life! Bravo!”

Josh Bernoff

I ghostwrote a chapter like this for a client . . . and it was thrilling! His experiences were so compelling, and this made it even better.

In the end, he decided to write the rest of the book himself. As a less experienced writer, he wasn’t comfortable with the present tense.

But it would have been a hell of a book written that way!

Rafia

First of all, congrats on the release of your memoir! After reading a little about it, it looks so touching and I’m sure it feels bittersweet. Thanks for sharing your perspective about writing in the first person. Did you know immediately that you wanted to write it that way or was it something you discovered in the process of writing and revising?

Audrey Kalman

I haven’t written memoir–yet!–but many of my short stories and novels are in present tense, which I find has many of the benefits you talk about here. I also like writing in present tense because it simplifies the language around flashbacks, which, most of the time, can be in simple past tense.

Liesbet

Yes! I’m so happy with this post. Years ago (in 2020), when I self-published my travel memoir “Plunge – One Woman’s Pursuit of a Life Less Ordinary”, I had a little hesitation regarding criticisms about my approach, despite knowing in my heart – and pursuing it – that the present tense was the way to go to share my story. I wanted to draw the reader in and feel that present tense is the way to do this. Based on the positive reviews for my book, this seemed to be the right style.

I enjoy writing in the present tense much more than in the past tense, because of the immediacy, the thrill and adventure in taking the reader with me, and replicating my attraction to the unknown and letting the reader feel the same. Plus, it’s more innovative and less stagnant as well. 🙂