Point of View

When I first started writing, I thought point of view meant my opinion of something. After I posted my first story on a writing website, I was quickly enlightened. A critiquer told me I jumped around in my point of view. Point of view? What was that? With a Google Search, it didn’t take long to find out what I was doing wrong, but even now, I sometimes have trouble with point of view or POV, as I have come to know and love it.

First person is the easiest way for me to write since it is my opinion on everything, if I wish to express it. And it is the coziest of all the viewpoints, just me and my reader. I write it as though I am talking directly to you, just as I am now. Memoirs are almost always written in first person, but many fictional novels and plays are done that way, too. When I read a novel written in first person, I feel an immediate connection — I am being included in a secret. I think of writing in first person as being similar to testifying in court. Tell only what you have witnessed. Hearsay not allowed. You can add lots of your emotion, and no one will say, “objection.”

Of course, as in court where you can commit perjury, the unreliable narrator who writes in first person may tell you one thing, and later in the book (or movie) you find it to be untrue. Think Gone Girl and all those fake flashbacks. That’s allowed, but it won’t make you any friends. I try to stay away from that because the reader may feel he is being tricked, and he may turn on me if that happens. He may even quit reading. He will certainly not like being purposely confused that way.

But, then, rules are made to be broken. In the Harry Potter series, much of it is written from Harry’s point of view, but in some places the reader must know more than Harry does, so Rowling shifts to third person omniscient. I was surprised to find this because of the many times I’ve been told you mustn’t change point of view, but if it works, and it certainly works, who am I to object? The one hard and fast rule is not to change point of view within one scene, unless you’re a god like Stephen King.

The most popular uses of second person point of view (the “you” word) are in do-it-yourself or self-help articles or technical books. The only time I utilize this POV is when I write a speech, but if you listen to music, you hear songs that do it all the time. I know you remember Carly Simon’s You’re So Vain. When I write in second person, I always sound preachy, so I try to avoid it. It is difficult to use second person successfully in fiction.

Now, for third person limited, the one where I always (almost always) get into trouble. I find I want to be the know-all, be-all, third person, but I end up totally confusing my reader. Floundering with third person point of view is a clear sign to a reader that I’m an amateur writer. I chose this topic to blog about because I find that if I write about something, I always understand it better. Not that it will make me a professional, but I will gain some knowledge just by doing some research on the topic.

In a third person limited narrative, four main people are involved: the author, the narrator, the protagonist, and the viewpoint character. Yes, that’s right, the author and the narrator are two different people. The author makes up the story and writes it down, or types it up. The narrator watches the story unfold and describes it to you as you read. You can’t think about the author who made up the story. You have to believe in the narrator to “follow” the story.

In third person limited point of view, the narrator witnesses all these believable events through the eyes of one character in the story. After the scene is set and the viewpoint character is chosen, all thoughts, opinions, speech, everything that happens is seen through the eyes and senses of this point-of-view character. If he cannot see it, he doesn’t know it’s happening. He can’t see behind him. He can’t know what someone else is thinking or feeling. The narrator must keep his separate opinions to himself because the reader does not want to be reminded that the narrator is there, separate from the POV character. Little asides and corny jokes are not allowed. In fact, the reader wants to forget all about the narrator and be immersed in the story.

At first, I thought the protagonist and the POV character had to be one and the same, but they can be different. Think about The Great Gatsby. Jay Gatsby is the protagonist, but we see the story through the eyes of Nick Carraway (POV). The protagonist is merely the main character. The author gets to decide these things, but once decided, he must be consistent or the reader’s attention will stray.

Third person point of view does not have to be limited — that is, limited to one person. More than one person in a story can tell the story, as long as a given scene description sticks with just one. Think Clarice and Hannibal Lecter. The reader would not be as involved in what was going on if Silence of the Lambs were told only through the eyes of Clarice. But even though more than one person tells the story, it does not become third person omniscient point of view. That would give away too many secrets. I’ll save that one for another post after my brain has fully absorbed the research for this one.

Follow Connie Morrison:
Connie Biddle Morrison is a writer and retired bookkeeper living near Gainesville, Florida. She is working on a memoir with the help of her critique pod. She is a 2x contributor to the Chicken Soup for the Soul anthology series: The Cat Really Did That? and Running for Good. Her stories have also been published in Long Story Short, All Things Girl, and Senior Times magazine. She is the author of the children’s book The Dragonfly and the Ladybug, and you can find her cozy mystery novel, Anna's Journey, on Kindle Vella. Check out her blog—and her original artwork—at Connieann's Corner, and follow her on Instagram and Facebook.
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15 Responses

  1. Patsy
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    Well stated Connie. Lots of helpful advice. Thanks.
    Patsy

    • Connie Morrison
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      Thank you, Patsy. I appreciate the positive feedback!

  2. Terri Depue
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    Definitely information I can use and I appreciate the examples. Great job!

    • Connie Morrison
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      Thanks, Terri. I was interested in the examples, too. Some were surprise POVs.

  3. Mary Bast
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    Very informative, Connie. From my own POV, however, I point out, as I always do, that you’ve used masculine pronouns in these sentences: “I try to stay away from that because the reader may feel he is being tricked, and he may turn on me if that happens. He may even quit reading. He will certainly not like being purposely confused that way.” It would be quite easy to have written instead, “I try to stay away from that because readers may feel they are being tricked and they may turn on me if that happens. They may even quit reading. They will certainly not like being purposely confused that way.” Technically, I doubt that you hope to be read by only one reader. More important to me, as a social psychologist, is the degree to which language affects our thinking, which then affects our language. We all know how women in all professions, including writers, has been overlooked historically and that our very language induces assumptions that affect our beliefs. Put more simply, we as writers have the opportunity to decrease gender bias by the way we write. What is now being termed “gender-fair” language is easy to accomplish and doesn’t require the awkward he/she substitution. According to one study of many, “A large body of empirical research documents that the use of gender-fair forms instead of masculine forms has a substantial impact on mental representations. Masculine forms activate more male representations even when used in a generic sense, whereas word pairs (e.g., German Lehrerinnen und Lehrer, “teachers, fem. and teachers, masc.”) lead to a higher cognitive inclusion of women (i.e., visibility of women)”: http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.02018/full

    • Connie Morrison
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      Uh oh, guilty as charged of some thoughtless writing. Thanks for pointing that out, Mary. I’ll try to do better next time.

  4. Mary Bast
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    I meant, of course, “how women in all professions HAVE been overlooked.”

  5. Joan Carter
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    Great description of the limited third-person point of view! Thanks, Connie. I’m looking forward to your post on the third-person omniscient POV.

    • Connie Morrison
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      Thanks, Joan. I’d better get busy. There’ll be lots of research for that one!

  6. Skipper Hammond
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    How come we type up but write down? Is that a matter of POV? Just asking.
    Seriously–the omniscient narrator who speaks directly to the reader, as in “gentle reader,” is out of fashion today because writers aim to pull the reader inside the character where she can experience whatever the character is experiencing. If the narrator lets his own opinion pop up on the page, the reader is made conscious that this is “just a story,” not real life.
    But sometimes a writer might not want the reader to identify with a character. Sometimes the writer might want to write something light and fun and entertaining. A member of my pod has a narrator who intrudes from time to time with comments on the characters’ naughty/ridiculous/foolish behavior. And I love it. Wouldn’t work in a heavy, deeply moving novel about life in a Nazi concentration camp, but in a comedy, if done well, is hilarious.

    • Connie Morrison
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      I agree, Skipper, and wasn’t aware that it was a “no, no” until my research. I did tend to do it, too, but after learning that it threw my reader out of the story, I have been going back and deleting those asides. Now, with your response…”I’m really confused!” But glad to hear no one will be chopping off my fingers if I miss some. 🙂

  7. Ann-Marie Magné
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    Oh. My. Gosh. You are all so clever and knowledgeable. That’s MY POV, at any rate. Connie, I learned more from this post than I knew could be learned. Thanks for the education.

    • Connie Morrison
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      You’re very welcome, Ann-Marie. We must let others know how beneficial writing blog posts can be, especially if the writer writes about something he (oh oh) wants to learn more about.

  8. Pat Caren
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    Connie, This is very interesting. Good job! Mary’s comment has me intrigued. Is she going to do a post on gender fair writing?

    • Connie Morrison
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      Thanks, Pat. Yes, I hope Mary does a post on that subject. She is so knowledgeable in so many areas! We are lucky to have her.