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How likeable does a narrator need to be?
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Deborah
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Nov 30, 2014 06:32AM

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I know a lot of people loved Gone Girl and I thought both of the main characters in that book were pretty miserable people. I'm one of the few that didn't really care for the book, but that was writing style as well. Plus, I don't like unreliable narrators, though some people love that type of twist.

Thanks for that Sunshine. I am grappling with this for something I am writing atm and I have been of the opinion that a narrating main character needs to be likeable enough that readers will be interested in hearing out 'their side of the story'. I'm at the point where I am considering doing it in third person instead.
Interestingly, I did love Gone Girl, which is a great example of the narrating characters not being likeable - I wonder if that is because I was tricked into thinking Amy was likeable in the beginning? I think I must be some kind of reading masochist because I love it when the author stays a few steps ahead of me and throws in a twist I didn't see coming.

Even though readers only see, hear, and experience what the narrator does, their interpretation of events may often differ from that of the narrator.
It is the author's technical writing and story-telling skills that will determine whether or not the book is a success or failure, not the character's personality.

Ooh, Frankenstein is another one of my all-time favourite books! Now I am wondering if am actually drawn to books where the narrator isn't all that likeable ...

Thanks Jim, that sounds like a good take on it, especially now as I have been reminded of a couple of books which I love, and which have been widely enjoyed, where the narrator is actually rather despicable.

I guarantee that there are readers out there who will like it if it is done well and in a way that appeals to that kin of reader. But I also guarantee that not everyone will like it no matter what you do.

With that said, I think it may be more difficult for people to buy into a book when the main character is someone they don't like. Not impossible, just more difficult and that is why the writing is so important.
Just some free-flowing thoughts:
I think it helps, if a main character is not a likeable character, for them to have a redeeming quality or something you can grasp on to as a reader, a thread of hopefulness that this character might be good deep down or making decisions for some sort of good, even if you don't agree with the decision, or at least not as bad you might think. I like to see a trait that you are hoping could be positive, even if you're not sure.
Or if the opposing character or whatever is happening to them is even worse than they are, so the "lesser of two evils".
On the other side is the character that is just so awful that you can't stop reading. I think that's the case with Gone Girl. The major twist is in the middle and you keep reading. I think people were stunned and couldn't believe it. It's like people that slow down on the highway to see the car crashes.
Hope those all make sense. Again, I don't think any of the above is necessary if the story and the writing are great. These were just some random thoughts I thought I'd share.
Good luck with your writing!




In the book I'm working on right now, I had a beta reader say my main character is like watching "a beautiful train wreck", you will not like her but you can't look away from her. Then out of nowhere, you'll find yourself cheering for her, only to hate her again ten pages later. I think it comes down to whether the character is redeemable, or there is meant to be "the shock".