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Q&A

How does the placement of transition sentences affects the meaning/tone of a piece?

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Example:

Finally, I began questioning the kid. What was her name? Where were her parents? And most important, what was she doing outside in this horrible weather? She replied to none of that. In fact, she didn’t utter a single word; all she did was to stare at me with her uncanny eyes. Luckily, I obtained that information by other means.

That night, after the kid had gone to sleep, I found a letter in her backpack.


Finally, I began questioning the kid. What was her name? Where were her parents? And most important, what was she doing outside in this horrible weather? She replied to none of that. In fact, she didn’t utter a single word; all she did was to stare at me with her uncanny eyes.

Luckily, I obtained that information by other means.

That night, after the kid had gone to sleep, I found a letter in her backpack.


Finally, I began questioning the kid. What was her name? Where were her parents? And most important, what was she doing outside in this horrible weather? She replied to none of that. In fact, she didn’t utter a single word; all she did was to stare at me with her uncanny eyes.

Luckily, I obtained that information by other means. That night, after the kid had gone to sleep, I found a letter in her backpack.

How does the meaning/tone differ in passages above?

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This post was sourced from https://writers.stackexchange.com/q/10862. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

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1 answer

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Your sentence implies that action took place which the reader is not seeing (the "other means"). Wherever that sentence is, that's where/when you're placing this off-screen action.

However, because the action of finding the letter physically happens in the next paragraph (that is, it's not off-screen), it has to be the idea or the decision to search her backpack which is the Other Means in that sentence.

  • In the first example, the Other Means sounds like an idea which occurs to the narrator while s/he's questioning the girl.
  • In the second example, the Other Means is being presented as a narrative device: this is the narrator explaining something to the reader as though we were in the room with him/her, having an actual conversation about these events.
  • In the third example, it sounds like the narrator only came up with the idea to search the girl's backpack after she'd fallen asleep.

Which one works better is simply a matter of when you want the idea to occur to the narrator.

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