Subject: False documents are good.
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Posted on: 2017-10-31 13:55:00 UTC

The Eddingses loved doing this, using a fake historical account as a prologue. The Belgariad starts with what's basically a religious story; each book of the Tamuli starts with a scholarly study of the events you're reading about. Heck, Tolkien does it, too, name-dropping King Elessar in his discussion of the Red Book.

What they do is to introduce you to the world and its background without having a character say it to another character. If the Prologue can tell us that Middle-earth is 'Earth but long ago and with elves', then Frodo doesn't need to have a conversation about it with Gandalf. ("Gosh, Gandalf, I do wish you'd tell me that old tale about how the world was created, I always so love to hear it...")

Another example is Brandon Sanderson (again!); each of the Mistborn books has false-document quotes at the head of every chapter. They let him feed in the backstory that everyone in the world already knows, while at the same time using it as a storytelling device and subverting it (by casting the setting's myths as a diary, I seem to recall).

The trick to doing this successfully is to use your false-document (or any other form of exposition) not just as exposition, but as part of the story. Check out the opening of Serenity (y'know, the Firefly movie), which manages to recap the relevant backstory from the series as part of the introduction of the villain. If you have a mentor to deliver information, make her teaching style relevant to the plot - the Wonder Woman movie gives us its founding myth as a bedtime story for Diana, which builds her relationship with her mother, feeds into her motivations, and - through what she is and isn't told - helps to establish both conflict and the plot of the film.

And for the love of all that's fictional, never do what some comic books do and have your hero yell "I'm trying to use my laser vision to stop you, but your forcefield is making you immune to it -- how?!". Trust your audience.

hS

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