Writing Tip – POV Switching

Good discussion on POV. I think the POV should fit the needs of the story. Readers should have intimacy with some characters, with others, they shouldn’t. Well-crafted POV changes provide the writer with another tool to manipulate the reader’s thoughts and emotions in relation to the story.


Eric Lahti


The first book I read that switched between 1st person and 3rd person point of view was Charles Stross’s The Rhesus Chart. At first it was the normal 1st person POV I’d come to expect from Stross, but then there were little bits of 3rd person POV that popped up. It threw me for a moment because it was unexpected, but the POV change was handled skillfully enough that it added a dimension to the narrative rather than pulling me out of the story. In a way, it was more like the chorus in Greek tragedies – those folks that told what was happening when the action on the stage wasn’t happening.



I don’t know if this is a new thing – this hopping between the depth of focus that comes from 1st person narrative to the breadth of knowledge that comes from 3rd person – but it seems to be…


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Published on June 01, 2016 05:49
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