Using the present tense to describe fictional events

Perhaps because fictional events have not actually occurred in the past, the literary convention is to describe them in the present tense. Until you become used to this convention, you may find yourself shifting between present and past tense. As you revise your draft, make sure that you have used the present tense consistently.

SHIFTING TENSES

Octavia demands blind obedience from James and from all of her children. When James and Ty caught two redbirds in their trap, they wanted to play with them; Octavia, however, had other plans for the birds (89-90).

CONSISTENT USE OF THE PRESENT TENSE

Octavia demands blind obedience from James and from all of her children. When James and Ty catch two redbirds in their trap, they want to play with them; Octavia, however, has other plans for the birds (89-90).

Related topics:

Referring to literary authors, titles, and characters

Avoiding shifts in tense when integrating quotations

Avoiding confusion of the work’s author with a narrator, speaker, or character