Present tense for writing about nonliterary works

When you are quoting, summarizing, or paraphrasing the author of a nonliterary work, use present-tense verbs such as writes, reports, asserts, and so on. This convention is usually followed even when the author is dead (unless a date or the context specifies the time of writing).

Example sentence with editing. Original sentence: Baron Bowan of Colwood wrote that “a metaphysician is one who goes into a dark cellar at midnight without a light, looking for a black cat that is not there.” Revised sentence: Baron Bowan of Colwood writes that “a metaphysician is one who goes into a dark cellar at midnight without a light, looking for a black cat that is not there.” Explanation: The past-tense verb 'wrote' has been replaced by the present-tense 'writes.'