Point of View
Vicki Hinze © 2003
What is Point of View (POV)?
It is the perspective through which readers will
experience the story.
From the inception of the story idea, the writer
makes story-telling choices. She chooses characters, plot, setting, themeand how
best to depict them. The writer also chooses who is best to depict specific story
elements. That "who" defines the POV character.
There are many options when it comes to point of
view, including:
- Omniscient
- First Person
- Second Person
- Third Person
Omniscient is "godlike." Where story
events are not filtered through the perspective or the eyes of any character. (Though the
writer may at times dip into the POV of any character.) Often this POV is seen in literary
novels, and sometimes in commercial fiction. Typically, the writer will use an
"inverted pyramid" structure, starting out with an overview and then narrowing
the scope to a protagonist or antagonist.
First Person POV is easily discerned because
the novel is seen through the eyes of one person, typically the protagonist. Pronouns used
are "I" or "me" (versus "he" or "she." Outside of
the mystery genre, this POV was far more popular in commercial fiction decades ago than it
is now.
In using First Person POV, the writer accepts
certain benefits. The story feels more immediate to the reader and emotional empathy is
created more swiftly and intensely due to the intimate nature of First Person POV. The
writer also, however, operates under specific handicaps. The reader can only know what the
POV character knows. Can only see, hear, taste, touch, smell and experience what the POV
character does.
Second Person POV is when one person tells us
the story of another person. This "narrator" can be reliable, or
unreliable--truthful with the reader, or a trickster. Its virtually ignored and all
but obsolete in todays commercial fiction.
Third Person POV is when the writer
incorporates pronouns like "he" and "she" (versus "I") and
is most prevalent in commercial fiction at this time. For that reason, well spend
the lions share of this article exploring it.
Once the writer chooses Third Person POV, she then
must choose whether that POV will be limited to one character or two, or if multiple
viewpoints will be used. Its extremely common in romance novels to use the POV
of the heroine and the hero. In mysteries, typically we see limited POV, meaning only the
viewpoint of the protagonist.
The decision on whose POV to use in the novel, or
within the scenes of a novel, is critical. Experts at craft have various opinions on what
criteria a writer should use to make this decision. I suggest the following aids:
1. Decide who has the most to lose in the novel.
Usually that is the protagonist. Therefore, he/she should have POV preference throughout
the novel.
2. Keeping in mind that the needs of the story
dictate every element in the story, establish the POV pattern early on and then stick to
it. For example, in the opening scene, the writer uses the heroines POV. In the
following scene, the writer uses the heros. In the third scene, the writer switches
back to the heroine.
By the third scene, the writer has established the
POV pattern and he/she should (loosely) adhere to it throughout the novel. This pattern
sets a novel rhythm that the reader follows and anticipates.
When Can A Writer Change POV?
Some experts say to only change POV at the end of a
chapter. Others say at the end of a scene. Still others say its okay to switch POV
if the character changes settings. The simple truth is there is no easy answer. You can
change POV at the end of a chapter, scene, sequel, or in the middle of any of them.
Why Does a Writer Change POV mid-scene or chapter?
And how does she do it?
Reserve this mid-scene/chapter change for those
times when a new POV character has more to lose than the original POV character.
Example:
A scene opens with the heroine being introspective
on her troubled marriage. She decides its worth fighting for, and resolves to make
the marriage work. Enters the hero, who tells the heroine hes filed for a divorce.
In this case, do you stay in the heroines POV
or switch to the heros?
Youd stay in the heroines POV because
she doesnt want the divorceshe has the most to lose.
Example:
You open the scene with the hero phoning the
heroine. Her kidnapped child has been located but she must extract the child herself
(which personifies her inner conflict that fosters her emotional character growth).
Do you stay in the heros POV or switch to the
heroines?
Here, you switch to the heroines POV because
on hearing this news, she has the most to lose. She must face her fear (her inner
conflict) and rescue her located child.
How this might read:
The phone rang in his ear. John rubbed at his
forehead, stared through the curtainless window at the neon lights on the building across
the street. How did he tell Kristen hed found her baby but couldnt get her out
of there?
"Hello."
"Kristen." John cleared his throat.
"Ive found her."
Kristen swallowed a gasp and squeezed the phone receiver. Her eyes
blurred, the back of her nose burned, and she locked her knees to stay upright. "Is
she . . . ?" Oh, God. She couldnt say it. Couldnt even think it.
"Shes alive."
In this example, we switched POV when Kristen
heard the news, using a transition, which is a bridge from one person to the other. Here
we used an emotional bridge. Johns disclosure prompted Kristens response.
(Action/reaction.)
Another efficient way to transition is to use an
object. In the above example, we could have stayed in John's POV until the end of the
call. When he hung up, then Kristen could hear the dial tone, changing the point of view.
A caution on transitions: keep them short. Imagine a
bridge that takes you from Point A to Point B. The longer the span, the weaker it is. Keep
the span short, tight, concise and itll be effective.
How Many Points of View does a writer need?
As many as it takes to convey the writers
intent. In the majority of commercial fiction, the writer usually restrains herself to
using the Points of View of the protagonists and perhaps the antagonist. Occasionally, a
writer will incorporate the POV of a secondary character to fulfill a specific story
purpose (such as conveying information the reader needs for the story to make sense that
the protagonist doesnt know).
Remember that with each POV change it takes the
reader a few pages to make the shift and "get into the head" of the new POV
character.
Obviously, the writer doesnt want to switch
POV too often (which is unkindly referred to as "head hopping") or the reader
gets weary and is unable to emotionally attach to any character. Without that emotional
attachment, there is no reader empathy. And a story the reader doesnt care about, or
cant identify with, the reader stops reading.
The writer shapes the story she wants to tell
through the choices of story elements she incorporates. Among other things, she
manipulates reader empathy, pacing, emotional distance, and perspective by choices on
Point of View.
Recommended Reading:
THE ART OF FICTION, Gardner
CHARACTERS & VIEWPOINT, Card
MAKING SHAPELY FICTION, Stern
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