I very much agree with your reason for writing, Slina.
As for the prologue question, I believe I answered a similar question of yours about this on this thread, but Ill go into more detail. Most of the time prologues are unnecessary to the plot and dont make any sense to the reader. Still, we stick them on. Why? One reason I see is as an attention getter. I like making my prologues extraordinarily dramatic. One story I was contemplating writing I was going to make the prologue the destruction of the world. Now thats what I call dramatic!
Even though I said theyre generally pointless, that doesnt necessarily have to be the case. Another science fiction story I was thinking about writing was going to be written like a dialogue that seemed like a cheesy advertisement for this futuristic society.
Im currently working on a fan fiction novel (Lord, please help me get through it!) and the prologue Im using for this piece is actually a scene previous to the story from the perspective of a character thats only in one scene that wouldnt have fit into the story as the first chapter. Its probably not necessary to the plot, but I dont think prologues really should be. What it does though, is as the story progresses, my characters run into the after effects of that scene. As soon as that happens, the reader is like, Ah! I know what happened here! even though my characters dont.
To use an example that I know Blessed-one will like, in the first
Wheel of Time book, the prologue includes this crazy man destroying some palace with weird magic, then this other person comes up to him and starts talking about prophecy and destiny and all sorts of stuff that makes no sense to the reader. When you get into the rest of the story though, you start finding out who this man was, understand the prophecies about him, discover who the person talking to him was, why hes insane, and all about the weird magic hes using. Now the prologue wasnt necessary to understand any of these points, but it gives the reader a little preview of things to come. It perks their curiosity, I suppose.
So theres my really long winded answer. Robert Jordan fans would be proud. As for my question, do you work on more than one piece at a time (such as a novel), or not, and why? In the spirit of Robert Jordan, dont be afraid to be long winded.