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Posts Tagged ‘pov’

Look Who’s Talking

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

When authors talk about Point of View (usually abbreviated as POV), we mean whose head are we in as we write the scene. Are we seeing things unfold from the heroine’s perspective? The hero’s? A secondary character? Writers hear all kinds of rules about POV, too. The most popular is write the scene from the POV of the character who has the most at stake.

That’s not how I choose whose head to be in when I write a scene because I don’t always know which character has the most at stake when I start a scene, and let’s face it, not all scenes have something at stake. At least not in the way that I interpret that.

So how do I decide which POV to write?

There are a few factors that can be quantified. Balance is a big one. If the two previous scenes are in the heroine’s POV, I’m going to lean toward doing the next in the hero’s head. If he cooperates. And considering the trouble my characters cause me all the time, it’s not a sure thing that he will.

The other factor I consider is the need for secrecy. :-) Some information needs to be kept away from the reader even after one of the characters knows it. In that case, if I have a scene that’s going to be skirting close to what I don’t want revealed, I’ll write in the other character’s point of view.

Sometimes I just go on instinct.

But the biggest consideration for me is which character is talking the scene in my head.

I hear my characters–their dialogue, their inner thoughts–and if I’m hearing my heroine run through a scene for me, I’m most likely to write it in her POV.

This doesn’t always work. In the story I’m working on now, I started the second scene of the third chapter in my hero’s head because I was seeing the later part of it through his eyes and because it would be more difficult technically to write the scene in my heroine’s POV.

The scene started out fine and then sputtered to a halt last Friday. I spent Saturday not getting anything accomplished, and the instant I turned out the lights and got into bed that night, I knew the problem was because I was in the wrong POV. I had to write the scene from my heroine’s perspective. I restarted the scene on Sunday and was tearing up the pages fast and furious all day and on Monday during my lunch hour at the Evil Day Job (EDJ), too. And then Monday evening I was stuck.

At first, I thought it was because I couldn’t remember where I was going with what I wrote hours earlier. I left off mid-scene, but not necessarily a good stopping point. I didn’t have much choice since the EDJ expects me to be back at my desk when lunch is over. I spent last night trying to figure out what I thought I was going to do and came up with no answers. I finally cut the last little bit I wrote with the intention of starting over today, saved the file, and went to bed.

And as soon as I turned out the light and got under the blankets, I realized I needed to switch to my hero’s POV. I even immediately knew the place where I needed to transition from her head to his.

Why didn’t I get this information hours earlier when I could have done something with it? Sigh.

But with this new epiphany, I cut what I had, rewrote it from my hero’s POV and finished the chapter. Yea!

Switch

Wednesday, May 14th, 2008

It’s funny sometimes how things change in writing so quickly. Like with the chapter I’m working on now–I knew both scenes that would comprise this chapter and I thought both of them would be from Shona’s Point of View (POV). In fact, I was certain the second scene would be in her POV right up until yesterday when I finished the first scene.

Logically, it makes sense to do the second scene in Shona’s POV. It allows the reader gets to see Logan’s condition through her eyes, but as I neared the end of scene 1 last night, it was Logan’s voice I was hearing, not Shona’s.

Unlike how things usually work for me, I had a general idea in advance of how the next 4 or 5 scenes would go. I was even getting words from the scene that was going to be in Shona’s POV. :-) Her reaction to seeing him, her curiosity, the outcome that discomfits her–all in her head. And then yesterday, Logan took over and it’s his voice I’m getting.

This isn’t a bad thing to have my plan change. I figure it has to add more depth to hear the scene as one person sees it and then get it down on paper from the other’s perspective, but this isn’t something I’m accustomed to having occur.

I’m looking forward to lunch hour when I can start writing this scene and find out why Logan took it over.

Whose Book Is It Anyway?

Saturday, February 24th, 2007

Yesterday was a hugely frustrating day. I spun my wheels until I was ready to scream. Since the scene wasn’t working in Creed’s POV, I switched back to Maia. This was better–for a little while–but it didn’t take long until I was fighting for every word again. Finally, late in the evening, it dawned on me that the problem was that I was trying to force one of my characters to do something he or she wouldn’t do.

I’ve mentioned here before that almost every time I get stuck like this it’s because I’m trying to do things my way instead of the way my h/h want to go. They’re endlessly aggravating, but they end up being right. That, of course, is even more aggravating because they’re always smug. Seriously, I need to have the kind of control over the characters that other authors do. I mean some of them even get to name their hero and heroine! Mine? They tell me what their names are and all the begging and pleading in the world won’t get them to change them.

Take Ryne, for example, the heroine from In the Midnight Hour. She told me her name began with an R, but wouldn’t give me more than that. I started looking through the girl’s sections of my baby name books. None of those R names would work for her. I found a few that seemed almost right, but would she go for one of those? Of course not. I swear I was on like my ninth baby name book when I finally found Ryne and she said, “that’s it.” You know why only one baby name book had Ryne listed in the girl’s section? Because Ryne is predominantly a boy’s name. Did that faze her? Nope. She was Ryne, period. No discussion allowed.

Or how about Conor from Through a Crimson Veil. At least his name is normal, but he insisted on spelling it with one N, and up till then, I’d only seen it spelled with two Ns. I figured that was minor since I’ve had characters who pronounce their names differently than everyone else would say them. Like Mika, Conor’s heroine. It’s not Mee-ka. She pronounces it Mike-ah. (I found out later, BTW, that Conor is an Irish spelling. I found that very interesting.)

And for a proposal I need to work on after I finish the Book From Hell, I have a heroine named Sasha. Sasha! I don’t write heroines called Sasha for heaven’s sake! I don’t know why I wasted the energy trying to get her to change her mind. It was a futile effort and I will be revising a proposal with a blond-haired heroine who goes by Sasha.

Then there are the characters who take over a complete book. Eternal Nights was supposed to be Stacey and Alex’s story, but Wyatt and Kendall showed up and it became their book and Alex and Stacey were relegated to secondary characters again. I had no say in this.

Anyway, back to the Book From Hell. So I reread what I had, figured out that while Creed doesn’t waste words, he’s not as straightforward as I had him acting in the scene and I cut that part. I also found a place where I cut away from the conversation between him and Maia too quickly and I went back to flesh that out. It seems to be going better, but I won’t know for sure until I get this chapter finished.

First Person: It’s All About Me

Tuesday, January 16th, 2007

I saw pictures of Oklahoma, I believe, and this town that was just coated in ice. It was incredible and these people aren’t going to have power for a while, not with all the trees down on the power lines. I’ll definitely take the fluffy white stuff we got over freezing rain. Nothing is worse than freezing rain.

On one of my published author loops, they’ve been talking about receiving their RITA books. Since Friday. Of course, I still don’t have mine yet and I could use all the time possible to squeeze in reading them. It sounds like everyone is getting 7 books. Gah! Seven. That is a hell of a lot of reading to do. I’m hoping I’ve got a lot of short entries. :-)

And one of the readers’ boards I visit is discussing a book written in first person point of view (I really should add a glossary to the blog so I can just abbreviate to my heart’s content) and the question came up about what kind of POVs they like. Now there’s an idea about discussing why so many people don’t like First Person.

You can add me to that camp. I’ve been known to turn the car around and go back to the bookstore to return books I accidentally bought that were written in first person. I don’t mind it in mysteries, but just loathe it in romance. Of course, there are exceptions. I have enjoyed a few romances written in first, but generally I don’t like it. I’ve tried to analyze why and I think part of the reason is that I want to be in both the hero’s and the heroine’s heads. Except I don’t like first person even when it’s done with alternating third person or alternating with the other’s first person POV. Again, there are exceptions that I’ve read and enjoyed.

The other reason is first person seems so egocentric. Me. I. Mine. I’ve read first person where I was so sick of seeing the word I that I started to roll my eyes whenever I read it. Instead of bringing me deeper into the story, it’s actually distancing me because of the world revolves around me thing.

Like I said, there are exceptions to this that sit on my keeper shelf. Most notably, my favorite werewolf book, Wolf In Waiting by Rebecca Flanders. WIW was told in alternating first person POV between the hero and heroine and it works beautifully and it was my favorite of the three book series.

And I have to run. Yikes!

Shards of Crimson Is Out!

Tuesday, January 2nd, 2007

Shards of Crimson is out today! This is an anthology set in Crimson City with four new stories by Liz Maverick, Carolyn Jewel, Jade Lee and Me.

My story is Dark Awakening and the hero and heroine are Kimi Noguchi and Nicodemus. Both were mentioned in Through a Crimson Veil although neither physically appeared. Kimi is being hunted by a dark demon, and with Mika and Conor out of town, she calls on Nic to protect her. Nic’s been avoiding Kimi for her own good, but now that she’s summoned him, all bets are off.

Yesterday, despite the 3:30am wakeup call, was a stellar day! Because it was a holiday for most people, the traffic was nearly non-existent which made the commute in okay. Yeah, the side streets were horrible and so was the highway, but the freeway was in decent shape. I got like the best parking spot at work since my union was the only one required to work and the office was empty. No one else was there. One of my engineers did show up around 10, but he stayed for less than an hour and he’s nice and quiet, and because I was able to concentrate, I got a ton of work done.

I was able to wear weekend clothes, which means extra casual and the commute home was fabulous! I couldn’t believe how light the traffic was. If only the freeway was like that every day, I wouldn’t hate driving so much. :-)

Worked on my edits some more. I’m still mulling over a comment about Deke and his reaction to his circumstances. Part of my problem is the scene where he might be off-balance is in Ryne’s POV and Deke isn’t going to admit to her–or display in any way she’d notice–that he’s rattled. It’s displaying a weakness and he doesn’t know her, so he wouldn’t do that. The next chapter is in his POV, but by then he’s reached a few conclusions and he’s not shaken up any longer–if he ever was.

POV can be a bitch. On the one hand, I understand why Deke should be rattled, but he’s too used to thinking on his feet to display this, and short of headhopping, his reactions are going to seem to be calm. On the other hand, yeah, you’d think he would be freaked out. :-) It’s this same thinking on his feet quality that makes him a guy who takes things as they come and doesn’t dwell on them or worry too much about what he can’t change. He just deals with what is. And by the time I’m in his head, that’s where he’s at. So I’m mulling for now.


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