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A question about subtitle headings when changing POVs
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Personally, I prefer subtitles. It's far more jarring for the reader to figure out a paragraph or two later they were reading a different POV. I've done that so many times. It's very frustrating.


I believe that subtitles/subheadings are a good way to not only signal to the reader a change of POV, but also a change of venue or significant time/date change in a story, when the author wishes to advance the action by a few days/weeks/months or change the venue, like when the MC disembark from a plane. This saves both the author and the reader from having to spend pages on what would be otherwise insignificant details and drivel.



Legend by Marie Lu used different fonts which reflected the two characters. A more traditional font for the one who was on the side of the establishment initially; a freer open font for the one who was not.

OK, for a "short story," I agree with your beta. A space break, for example, works better, and make it obvious. A long story, such as Game of Thrones, that's completely different.

So, yes, subtitles in novels.
BUT a space break can also work well if it is CONSISTENT and never put in the middle of the same POV. Make the POV voices different--this his harder than people realize. One writer who totally failed to make the voices different was Veronica Roth in that third book of her series--without the subtitles the reader would have been lost. This is just one of several reasons the book was not nearly as good for people who like good writing, and why it's a good thing the movie series wasn't completed.

That said, I do think it's a bit much for a short story.
As a reader I find short/quick POV changes to be irritating and off putting, so I'm not really sure they belong in a short story at all. Obviously, that's my opinion and other's may vary.


I think I will then keep the subtitles in most cases. I will also try to make the voices even more different and perhaps to drop some POVs when then don't contribute much to the story, but in some cases I can't because my stories have a lot going on in terms of plot.
What I might also do as all my beta-readers asked me is to increase the word count and make novellas of most of the short stories. They have enough plot to work as more than short stories so they probably shouldn't remain as such. ;-)

Key words: "of a short story".
Frankly, I don't think short stories should have chapters or break titles unless it's absolutely necessary.
Even in my longer works, I section my work as follows:
Double space line break -- When there is a minor change in the time or place but the POV does not change.
Triple space line break with "***" centered on the second line -- When a POV change is made or there is a significant change of scene or passage of time that does not warrant a new chapter.
Chapter break -- When one subsection of the story has been wrapped up and a new one has begun. There could be a change in POV, locale, or time, but this is really determined by what I think of as plot modules: each chapter is a logical entity unto itself. This is the only time I might use a Title and/or subtitle.
For short stories I'd stick with the first two types of breaks, above, and not use tags for POV/place/time unless it was vital to the story structure.
Instead, I'd just make sure to be clear in the first paragraph or dialog tag who's speaking and/or where they are. I've read plenty of stories with frequent POV changes that don't spell it out and if it's written well enough, I have no problem figuring out what's going on.
It's like in movies, scene shifts are frequent and expected. You only get "Paris, September 1944" or the like when it's important to the story.

If you show the Eiffel Tower and WWII outfits, you don’t need the super. It becomes redundant. Sometimes the belt-and-suspenders approach is good, but one does run the risk of annoying readers.

A short story seldom survives a shifting pov. If you decide that's the only way to tell the story, do give us a subtle clue. *Not* a font change, and probably not a subtitle, but perhaps a reference to where we lost saw that character or whom we saw them with.

I think I will then keep the subtitles in most cases. I will also try to make the voices even more different and perhaps to drop some POVs when then don't contrib..."
A great book to read is The Secret Life of Pronouns: What Our Words Say About Us even though it's not directly about writing voice--it is helpful with age and gender and other things we don't usually think about.

Indeed, I'm so happy that all my beta readers think my short stories should be longer, I'll probably expend the next decade developing all stories LOL

One uses dates (July 13, 1969, & etc.), another uses dates and location titles, while the third merely has three asterisks (***) between POVs, but each of the four characters are distinctive enough that a name or description is enough to immediately distinguish between them.
Books mentioned in this topic
SNAFU: An Anthology of Military Horror (other topics)The Secret Life of Pronouns: What Our Words Say About Us (other topics)
I think that a subtitle makes it clearer for the reader that the POV has changed. I just got the idea from the chapters on GOT.
What is your take on it? POV subtitles yay or nay?