First, we should define point of view just in case you need a refresher. Truth is, we all often need a refresher even when we don’t want to admit it.
Point of view is all about who is talking and/or telling the story.
HERE IS THE LINK TO LISTEN OR READ ON OR DO BOTH!
YOUR NEXT QUESTION IS: IS THERE ONE NARRATOR OR MANY? AND WHO THE HECK IS IT?
That’s really one of the first questions you want to think about. You have to decide if you’re going to have just one point of view in your story or a lot.
A lot of our stories follow one character scene after scene after scene. Things that happen to the story happen to this character. We are invested in that character pretty heavily.
But sometimes, the story is about a person one but not told by that same person. This makes us a little more worried that Person One might not make it through the story because our subconscious brain thinks, “Um, why isn’t Person One telling the story? DO THEY DIE?!?!”
Or sometimes the events of the story happen to a ton of people. Think of that zombie story that became a movie. We have a lot of different narrators because there we want to show all their stories.
Then, you have to decide which of the main point of views you want to use. They all have good points and bad points, but let’s just set you up with the big three. Each can be determined by the personal pronouns that the narrator uses.
First-Person Point of View.
This is the land of I. It’s all about me. It’s all about my story.
Here’s an example.
I went to the hospital and brought pizza.
Second-Person Point of View.
This is all about you, you, you. Yes, you.
You went to the hospital and brought pizza.
Or to some cooler
You went to the hospital, bringing pizza with you.
Third-Person Point of View
This is all about them and her and him. It can be omniscient or limited omniscient.
Here’s third person limited
Sadie went to the hospital. “I’m bringing pizza,” she thought. I hope they like it.
Or third person omniscient where you aren’t directly in the characters’ heads with internal monologue but know everything about everyone.
Sadie went to the hospital, a pizza box carried in her steady arms, the smell of pepperoni whisking around each person she passed, the orderly, the struggling father, the mother with the heroin-track arms, the gunman. He would kill for that pizza, but how could she know that? To be fair, right now he’d kill for anything and nothing.
There you go! There is also a Fourth Person Point of View, but that one would require its own podcast. So we’ll try to get there next week.
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