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POV question for readers
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Heidi
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Jun 22, 2015 02:56PM

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On the other hand, switching narrators paragraph to paragraph sounds more like someone going out of POV and not willing to admit it. Stay away from that. :P

On the other hand, switching narrators paragraph to para..."
Agreed. Head hopping confuses readers including me.

Be careful of repeats, though. If two characters are part of the same scene, don't replay the scene from another POV. A couple of lines is alright, more is going to look like filling and stalling. I think this should only be used if really necessary (i.e. char A and B have such different views of the same event, such different internal responses, that showing their reactions is useful when it comes to the rest of the story).

On the other hand, switching narrators paragraph to para..."
I agree with this, but scene breaks can take care of that as well. I would use a marked scene break as opposed to a soft scene break though.

I love the idea of playing with POV - it can make things interesting! But I agree with the others on the thread who think paragraph to paragraph POV shifts may come across as head hopping. I don't see a reason not to use different narrators in separate chapters, though. I did a little of this in my last book - three different narrators over the course of the book, though two of them were only there very briefly.

Yes, POV can make such a huge difference and I enjoy reading books from multiple points of view, but agree with Yzabel, it can be repetitive if not done skillfully.
Speaking of POV shifts from paragraph to paragraph, I recently read a book from a well known author who used this technique. She would often head hop from paragraph to paragraph. I could follow the nearly seamless shifts and immediately know whose head I was in. However, even though it was well done, I was occasionally confused and annoyed by it.

On the other hand, I've read another book that did it really well (North Child by Edith Pattou). There are about five characters that the book follows, and their voices are so distinct that you can tell at a glance who's talking.

That sums it up completely!

I agree with Ellie. The voices definitely have to sound different. I recently finished listening to "The Girl on the Train" audio book which illustrated the unique voices of the three narrators with different actresses, but in print writing, making your narrated voices distinguishable can be much more difficult. You really have to nail down how you want your characters to sound before you can even think about giving them a unique voice.
Paula Hawkins listed the name of the narrator at the beginning of each chapter which proved extremely helpful for me - even with the unique voices of the actresses. However, if you decide on a third person limited POV, the direct introductions at the beginning of each chapter would be redundant.
Hope this helps!





I agree each character must be distinct. Why would a writer bother with more than one POV if not?
As to the reader immediately recognising which character is the narrator, that really depends on the story and the way you present. My aim is to leave the reader in no doubt as to where they are in the story and who they are with at all times, and there are many creative ways to skin that cat.


Oh, I really want to go write a book with multiple POVs now!

It's great fun, Ellie, and you come out with enough skills to be a circus juggler!



I have another series I'm pondering that will just be a single POV but that is a few years out.


That is an excellent point, Jim. I enjoyed the Dark Tower series by Stephen King and he did a good job at keeping true to each character, whether it was Roland or Jake, Susannah or Eddie.