Unit 3 Lesson 2
Unit 3 Lesson 2
Narration is drawn upon by the inherent human need to tell and share stories largely for
entertainment.
What makes a narrative effective and memorable is in the writer’s skill to pace the story and also
in the story’s relevance to anyone who would read it.
Narrative Writing
Narration, in its basest definition, is storytelling. It is a sequence of events, not necessarily
arranged in chronological order, told by the narrator, happening in a particular place at a particular time.
Narration is creating a world based on the writer’s imagination. It is also revisiting a world based on the
author’s memory. In either case, the reader is claimed to be transported from one’s real world to the
reality of the story being read.
An effective narrative is that which makes the reader think and compel him/her to read the
narrative again. To achieve this effectiveness, writers should make sure that their narratives should have
vivid description of details, a consistent point of view and verb tense, and well-defined point or
significance.
Ex: She took a breath, and the freezing air went into her lungs and felt them going into spasm.
She gasped and more cold air went into her lungs, and it was as she were drowning.
Time Summary
As supposed to as a time stretch in which in a single is prolonged, a time summary is
characterized by jamming together multiple events and/or shortening a relatively long period of time.
Time summaries can be determined with expressions such as “In a single day…”, “Overnight…”, “After
the winter season…”, “After around a week or so…”, “A few years after…”, etc.
Flashforward
As opposed to a flashback, a flashforward is an event that has yet to happen in the story. It is
“flashing forward” or quickly looking at something that will happened in the future. Similar to the
primary purpose of a flashback, a flashforward is included in a narrative to add meaning to the story.
Ex: When Ebenezer Scrooge is visited by the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come and sees his own
grave.
Dialogue
A narrative does not only have a narrator who tells a story in accordance to how he/she observes a
sequence of events. Writers also include dialogues, a word or a series of words enclosed in a pair of
quotation marks, which signal the characters’ spoken word.
Ex: “I don’t want to go home,” said Julia. “I like it here at the zoo. The animals are all so funny.”
She began to cry and then wailed, “I didn’t even get to see the elephants!”
Reporters:
Macalandap, Hamim M.
Shalabie, Rayan H.
Tomawis, Al-Hussein G.