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Writing and Publishing
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CHARACTER-BASED CHAPTER STRUCTURE AND PLOT DEVELOPMENT
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In the second, there were two main characters, a woman and a man, lovers. I wrote the novel from the
first person POV of the woman. In alternate chapters she is reading what she thinks is fiction, but is really the story of the man's life. The alternate chapters are in third person from the man's POV.

However, I'm plotting out the ninth book in the series and that one seems likely to be split along the lines you mention. Given the previous structure of my books, if the perspective changes from one character to another, it will happen in the form of a section break because that will seem more natural and logical.
I'm currently reading something which not only shifts character perspective within a chapter, but shifts from first person for the protagonist to third person for the secondary characetrs. Now that is enormously annoying! I wouldn't recommend that to anyone.

I've not yet read any of Martin's books; though, I've heard a few people complain about the same thing that you bring up. I would think that could be a tad confusing, not to mention annoying.

I tried to avoid this in my own work by waiting until the third book, so all the characters are well known, and making sure I didn't create a chapter just because it was "time" to revisit that character - I created chapters based on the need to tell the story from that point of view at the time. That means that
some of my characters get more "air time" than others, but I don't necessarily think that all the characters have to be evenly balanced as far as how many wordsd are devoted to each one.
So - I think it can work, and I've read books where it did work (I like the idea of dividing it into sections, which is basically what JRR Tolkien did in LoTR). But there are some pitfalls to avoid as well...

I've found that focusing on only a single character in each chapter helps me control just how much the reader knows. There are certain things, actions, and events I only want revealed in later parts of the story so moving between different people, all with different sets of limited knowledge, helps keep up a certain amount of mystery.


Again it's not a conscious plan, but it's been pointed out to me that I tend to use minor cliff-hangers at the end of each chapter. This helps keep the reader hooked as they not only have to read the next chapter but usually the one after that to find out what happened, by then, of course, they've experienced the cliff hanger from the chapter in between.
Due to very few reviews/ratings it's hard to say how well that is received, but the few readers I've spoken too see to like it and if a number of copies of the first book in my series sell one week then I'm almost guaranteed to see the same number of copies of the second book sell the next week, and again with the third book the week after.
I think it's a good technique, and easy for the reader to follow.

At any rate, what are members’ thoughts on this approach to story and plot structure?