Types of prologues?

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A prologue is an introduction to a piece of literature that can provide background information or future events. There are four main types: historical, past protagonist, future events, and different point of view. Prologues are commonly found in novels.

A prologue is an introductory part of a piece of literature. Some prologues may begin by giving the reader background information relevant to the story. Other types, however, may provide the reader with future information, and the story will eventually lead to the events described in the prologue. A prologue can also be written from a different point of view than the rest of the story.

Writers sometimes use prologues to introduce a piece of literature. All sorts of prologues are usually similar to short stories, but tie into the bigger story that follows. These are commonly found at the beginning of novels.

Historical prologues are one of four main types of prologues and typically provide background information about the setting of a story. These can be used to describe recent or distant past events. Stories set in a different time or place can benefit from these types of prologues and are often used in historical or science fiction novels.

Another of the most common types of prologues that describes past events is the past protagonist prologue. This type of prologue describes an important event that happened to the protagonist in the past. Writers use this type of prologue to help readers understand why the protagonist is the way he is. For example, if a writer begins a story about a man with one leg, readers will most likely be confused as to why he has only one leg. Instead, the writer can create a short prologue describing the accident in which the protagonist lost his leg.

Other prologues may also be set in the future, rather than the past. These types of prologues usually describe events that take place after the main plot of the story. The events depicted may occur after the entire story or somewhere near the middle or end of the story. Readers are therefore usually intrigued enough to keep reading the story to find out why these events happened.

Some prologues even offer a different point of view than the rest of the story. These can be set either in the past or in the present, but must offer a different point of view of the character from that of the protagonist. They often give the reader information that the protagonist doesn’t discover until later. These are typically more common in mystery or mystery novels and are usually written from the point of view of the criminal.




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