The point of view in any story is important because it provides a guide to manage the execution of your story. Most works of fiction use one point of view although a second perspective can be brought into the story for a short period of time.
Third Person
Perspective is the most common method of conveying a work of fiction. This
method allows the narrator to have at least limited omniscience. The narrator
has limited access to the knowledge and feelings of the characters in the story
and can take the reader from one-character setting to another easily. There is
no questioning of how the narrator knows so much about each individual; it is a
premise that is simply accepted by most readers.
Unlike first person
perspective that conveys the story from the perspective of a cast member, third
person perspective narration does not allow the narrator to actually
participate in the action. They are simply the mechanism that operates outside
the story to bring the various story threads together.
If a writer were to
give the narrator full access to all feelings and thoughts of the cast of characters
the story would be a little flat because nothing would be left to the
imagination.
Third person
narratives can be spotted by the predominate us of words such as they, he, she
and it. The narrator talks about others - never about themself.
The least common
perspective is Second Person Perspective. Very few novels can utilize this
approach throughout an entire work.
This type of fiction
relies on words like you and you're. The use of this type of perspective either
assumes you will connect with the story as if it is written to you or that you
will understand you are reading a private story written to and about someone
else. It is rare to find a full manuscript that uses this perspective although
an Epistolary Novel such the C.S. Lewis masterpiece “Screwtape Letters” may
likely be considered second person perspective in its entirety.
The trouble many
writers get into is an unintentional shift in perspective. This can be used
effectively under certain circumstances, however the shift in perspective needs
a breaking point to allow the reader to gain some understanding that a shift
has taken place. Without a break to qualify the shift in point of view the
story becomes confusing because the reader has to work hard at discovering who
is actually telling the story.
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