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Joined: Nov 2000
Posts: 1,289
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Joined: Nov 2000
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One of the versions of this is the notorious Mary Roberts Rinehart "Had-I-but-Known" syndrome, in which the narrator, who is the main character usually (most Roberts books are in the first person) at least once in the book starts, "Had I but known what I learned later ..." or something to that effect, which if you did know it, the mystery would be solved.
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Joined: Nov 2002
Posts: 180
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"Heh. I was gonna say it sounds like "The DaVinci Code," until I realized this is a pretty common technique. "Foreshadowing" or either "presaging" comes to mind; but maybe too subtle?"
This isn't really what I think of as foreshadowing, somehow. To me, that term implies something that happens early in a book or movie that is very like something that happens later on, but perhaps less intense than the later plot development. I think of a particularly lousy movie I saw once ("Fun House", I believe it was) where the heroine is taking a shower and you think she's about to be hacked to bits and it's only her brother annoying her. Brian DiPalma, a director I really don't like, pulls that stunt pretty often.
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