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Unreliable Narrator
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In contrast, I find first person easiest. I kept a journal for years, so I'm used to writing in first. But of course, that comes with its own challenges!



When it comes to writing, I mostly write 3rd person. I just find it easier. I do tend to write with a focalization on a particular character, or jumping back and forth between characters, rather than doing the omniscient narrator, though. Lately I've been working a bit more on 1st person writing but it's still a bit new to me and I don't have any big projects right now that are in the 1st person. I do have an upcoming project which will be written in 3rd person present tense with a heavy focalization on an unreliable, or at least uninformed and biased, narrator. So that'll be interesting.
@Brian. You make an interesting point about surprising both reader and character at the same time. I agree; it brings an element of suspense into the narrative. On the other hand, though, dramatic irony is a good tool for creating suspense as well.
@Emma. I agree with you that writing 3rd person is easier. But I find it difficult to have a focalization on one character. I tend to describe a lot what every character thinks, that's why I prefer the omniscient narrator. Yet, I love reading books with unreliable, uninformed or biased narrators of any sort.
@Emma. I agree with you that writing 3rd person is easier. But I find it difficult to have a focalization on one character. I tend to describe a lot what every character thinks, that's why I prefer the omniscient narrator. Yet, I love reading books with unreliable, uninformed or biased narrators of any sort.

I enjoy reading first person, but it is so difficult to write. At least for me.

Thanks Andrew! I'll check it out as soon as I have time.
@A.J. Do you sound angry, or is it just my imagination? A clarification then: I'm not being "rigid about POVs and temporal concerns." I was just asking anyone's opinion and giving my own personal one. And I never said one POV was better than another.
Oh, OK. Sorry ^.^ English is not my mother tongue, so sometimes I misinterpret comments when I don't have the person facing me. But I'm working on getting better :D
I was wondering if anyone else loves unreliable narrators. That is to say, in first person narratives, someone who lies or does not say everything. A narrator like Jekyll in his "Full Statement of the Case" for instance (The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, R.L. Stevenson, 1886).
I love reading first person narratives, and I've recently started writing in that way too. I think it's more difficult because there are a lot of things you can't say as the narrator is not omniscient (unless you write from the viewpoint of God ^^). In the case of unreliable narrators, it's hard to give enough details to guide the reader without becoming obvious by giving too much stuff.
Do you like reading/writing in the first person?
Do you like having to analyse the narrative to find what's going on because the narrator doesn't say all?