A group I belong to once wrote a booklet called What's the Point of Point of View.
This series of tips will be about the two most commonly used ones. First and third person accounts of a story. This will start with First person.
In first person, the I's have it. In some ways this is the easiest viewpoint to write and it is also the hardest. First person is used when the story is to be told from a single person's point of view, most of the time. A favorite historical writer once wrote a book using first person hero and first person heroine.
When writing first person, only what the viewpoint character can see, hear, touch, taste, smell and think are possible. Unless the character can read minds he or she can't know what a person thinks or feels other than what they can discern through observation.
There are several problems that can be encountered while writing first person. The first is the constant use of I and varying the sentences can help here. Searching for ways to eliminate the use of I takes work. Another problem is tangents. The story can be forgotten while the character goes off on something that's not related to the story.
I speak from experience. I have a series of cozy mysteries begun in the first person. When I finished the second or third draft of the book I had a lot of words, but I had to go through and excise all the ones that didn't do one of three things, advance the plot, develop characters, or give vital information such as descriptions of places and clues or wild geese to fool the reader.
First person is very effective in mysteries, especially cozy ones. Another place I've seen it very effectively done is when the writer uses it in short segments to allow the villain to have a voice. Lately, I've read a number of romances done in first person and when reading the love scenes I feel very uncomfortable. I'm not sure why and for some people writing in first person comes easy. Maybe that's the reason.
Just remember when using first person, try to remember the story and rein in your character when they get carried off on some tangent or when an I pops up in nearly every sentence.
Great post, Janet!
ReplyDeleteA favorite contemporary romance author of mine, Kristan Higgins, writes in first person. I love her creative story telling. She is great with describing the hero's reaction to things so you get an indication of his thoughts. And yet sometimes I long for the hero's point of view. Have you ever seen a book written in first person with two POVs? (Say each chapter first person POV of a different character?) Do you think something like that could work?
Wendy, There is a historical by Roberta Gellis and I'm sorry I don't remember the title but she does first person from the hero's and the heroine's point of view, alternating chapters. Sometimes the same scene is shown through both point of view. The book isn't new but it was very well done. Janet
ReplyDeleteHi there, Janet.
ReplyDeleteI'm going to tackle this first-person POV for a sequel to my Choices trilogy. I announced at a convention that the hero would be writing it and the ladies got way too excited. So now I kinda HAVE to do it. The good news: he CAN read minds. The better news: he's polite enough not to do it all the time.
I'm not too keen on those books where POV switches with each chapter. It's as if you've just gotten used to one person's storytelling style and thoughts, and then you have to learn someone else's for a chapter. Then go back to Person A for a chapter. Rar. But that's only one reader's opinion.
I'll be be-bopping around for more tips like this to get me through Nigel's book! Thank you!
From Sandy Lender
"Some days, you just want the dragon to win."