The Seasonal Reading Challenge discussion
OLD TASK HELP THREADS
>
15.8 - From a Different Perspective
date
newest »


In the Night Garden
..."
That sounds like it will work just fine. Just explain how the POVs shift when you post your completed task.

(From wikipedia: limits narration to what can be known, seen, thought, or judged from a single character's perspective at a time (the point of view character), but changes that point of view character many times during the piece)

(From wikipedia: limits narration to what can be known, seen, thought, or judged from a single character's per..."
As long as there are multiple perspectives, yes.

I picked it up at the library because it fit Gayla's task, but I found several to use there...and this one looks like it fits here...

From the excerpt, it looks like it will work just fine.


Yes, first-person plural was approved in message #22.

Yes.

The viewpoint switches from the Mandchurian girl's to the Japanese soldier's every chapter..

The viewpoint switches from the Mandchurian girl's to the Japanese soldier's every chapter.."
Yes, that will work. Just mention the changing perspective when you post your completed task (just makes it easier for the record-keeper ;o)).


Yes, that would work.


i've read it, and it's told through omniscient third person. i can't think of any literary device used to address the different languages. she used an interpreter as a character to deal with that. it's a lovely book, though, hope you can fit it in somewhere! :)

Ok, I guess I was thinking of something else. Thanks for quick response, Kiki.

LOL....... A decapitated head is certainly a different perspective so, yes, it would work.


Unless the interviews and articles make up a majority of the book, I don't think this is going to work. Sorry!


I checked out the preview on Google books and it looks like the first part (and I guess the 3rd part as well) is written in 1st person narrative. If the narrator is speaking to another character when he says "You were wearing that blue dress and I wondered what you thinking as I spoke..." etc., it would still be considered 1st person. Second-person narration is when the narrator addresses the reader as "you."
If the middle part is told from 4 different people's perspective, however, that would work as long as this part comprises at least 1/2 the book.



From the dog's perspective works.

Allison Hewitt Is Trapped: A Zombie Novel
It is in a narrative, but as a blog.

Allison Hewitt Is Trapped: A Zombie Novel
..."
Yes, that would work. Looks good, too!

Novels in verse will work.


That works.

Yes, that works.
Books mentioned in this topic
Abandon (other topics)Abandon (other topics)
The Ship in the Hill (other topics)
The Ship in the Hill (other topics)
Crank (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Daniel Pennac (other topics)Daniel Pennac (other topics)
Jonathan Stroud (other topics)
Jonathan Stroud (other topics)
Gregory Maguire (other topics)
More...
In the Night Garden
I read the Goodreads description of this book and it doesn't really describe how it has shifting perspectives. Some of the review people have posted explain the book a little better.
It is loosely based on Scherazade. There is a setup about a girl in the garden who is a storyteller. She begins telling a story to the other main character, a little boy, but then a character in her tale starts telling another story, etc, until you are about 4 layers deep from the original two characters. I read a little of it about 2 years ago, and have wanted to come back at a time when I can really pay attention, the POV is difficult to follow.