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Narrative point of view? First person vs third vs omniscient?
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Personally, I like first person the best, as sometimes I like to feel like I am the character and it's the best one for doing that. Third person is useful though, from an author's perspective, if you need to let the audience know what more than one character is thinking.


With first person, I get more engrossed into the story because of the personalized nature.


Good point. It does feel like cheating to know more than them




After thinking about it more, I couldn't really remember ever reading a first person novel. So I went to my bookshelf and found out a few of my favorites were indeed first person. I also realized that there were a few more variations that I had never seen before.
One example is a story where the main character was done in first person present and the rest of the characters were done on third person past. I didn't find it hard to follow, but I could understand where someone would.
I had someone read one of my novels a couple of weeks ago and they commented that I was mixing my perspectives. (They rudely suggested that I should pick a perspective and stick with it.) I couldn't figure out what they were talking about, until I realized they were referring to the way I portray thoughts in my third person narrative.
For me thoughts are always immediate and personal and therefore should be in first person present tense. Many of my favorite novels are written this way, and it wasn't until I did more research that I found out that I write in what's called third person privileged.
To further confuse some people, I also italicize the thoughts so that the reader will know that the point of view character is thinking without having to use thought tags all the time.
Example: Oh crap, not again, Chip Bowery frowned as he stumbled down the maintenance stairway to the subway tracks. I hate coming down here by myself, the place gives me the creeps.
To me this is a great way to be in each of the POV character's heads without doing the whole story in first person.
I would be curious to hear your thoughts on the matter (italicized or not.)
; )

idiffer | 2 comments
Ooh, I've been really thinking about this one. So definitely first person. Limited third person is okay, and second person is just plain weird and pretentious. Now the "why":
I read books to escape into another life, so the closer some aspects are to real life the deeper the immersion. "I thought" is closer to how we experience the world than "[my name] thought". The operative word being "closER". Third person is often used to share thoughts of other characters - we live only in our own heads. Also first person generally has more thoughts of the character included - in real life we think constantly.
This is why I don't like multiple pov and breaking the fourth wall.
@Greg
Interesting thing you did with mixing perspectives. Haven't seen that done before. I like it. And I vote for italics - otherwise sometimes it could be confusing. Like you read "He went..." and think "the main character went", but then as the sentence goes along you get that it's a thought.

idiffer | 2 comments
Ooh, I've been really thinking about this one. So definitely first person. Limited third person ..."
Great answer.
The quoted line is actually the beginning of the first chapter from my new book.
Like I said I was really amazed what I found when I went back through my library. It's not as cut and dry as you would think. It's also interesting to see how authors bend the rules and not only get away with it, but they do it very well.

The next problem I ran into was trying to copy that process on my second novel. I had two main characters and two distinct timelines that didn't merge until the end. Jumping back and forth was confusing for my readers and made the book super long, so I split it into two books and had each book follow the perspective of a single protagonist.

With first person, I get more engrosse..."
I agree--it's harder to see the bigger picture when it's in first. Maybe that's why first works so well in mystery novels--since you can't see what's around the corner until the protagonist does.
At the same time, however, you do lose some personal connection with characters when the narrative's in third, so I tend to enjoy third rotated. It's fascinating being able to see each character's thoughts and actions while maintaining an overarching viewpoint of my own. And when you get the perspectives of all different characters--the good, the bad, the grayed, and the frayed--the story becomes so much richer.
One of my favorite young adult series in third rotated is Falling Kingdoms by Morgan Rhodes.

I've read some really good third-person books, too, though I don't seem to come across them as often. I think the main con I've come across with those books is that sometimes the narrative feels too detached from the characters. As for omniscient, I haven't read much in that style, but I think Markus Zusak's "The Book Thief" probably counts. It's absolutely fantastic, especially because of the style of narration.

I have my reasons, so allow me to list them. (They're based off my own experiences, though, and as such they may not be what the rest of you feel.)
Third Person
Pros:
* Easiest to write, but still challenging enough to present its fair share of difficulties (who said writing was supposed to be that easy?)
* Allows for the greatest and most reasonable amount of freedom in writing style
* No, or reduced, need to worry about "fake" inner dialogue
Cons:
* Readers may not be able to relate to a character as much since they don't quite know all of their inner workings
Omniscient
Pros:
* More than the main character(s) is covered
* Greater ability to world-build since you can go beyond the environment of the protagonist(s)
Cons:
* Writers may risk revealing too much too early on in the story
First Person
Pros:
* Readers, since they're able to know the protagonist's inner turmoil and thoughts, may be more able to relate to a character
Cons:
* Way too easy to butcher
* Overused to the point of being frowned upon
Also, don't even get me started on the mixing of POVs - it really annoys me when I'm reading a book in first person and the writing suddenly cuts to an omniscient narrator for...what, a single chapter? You might as well have not added that lone chapter and instead worked on fixing the plot holes that resulted in your book needing it in the first place. (Exceptions do exist, of course, but they're very rare.)
And that's all I have to say for now. Thank you for coming to my TED Talk!
*drops mic and runs off to go write a short story*

Omniscient is tiring to me, and difficult to believe. I don’t mind a switching perspective but I don’t like all of them at once. It ruins any sense of dramatic irony!

In adult books, third person is the most popular, and authors who choose a different perspective tend to get bad reviews.
I admit, I prefer different perspectives depending on the age of the characters. I do like third person more than first in adult books.


Here are the definitions.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narration
Examples:
Hunger Games - First
Harry Potter - Third
Lord of the Rings - Omniscient (All knowing)
I'm curious to see the answers.
My fav is third.