Multiple Limited POVs
Or: Taming a Beast with 24 Heads.
[Awesome picture of 24-headed leviathan here.]
Let's put our
serious pants on early this week, guys. Chances are, unless you're in a regularly-meeting
critique group, you ain't gonna get many comments on this beast. Esp since
many writing forums have a limit – maybe 2k words or so – of how much you can
post at a time for critting. And establishing that you are indeed doing multiple
POVs can take a few chapters.
If you're saying "Hold on, J. I totes need 24 POVs in my epic on
racehorse lovers of the twenty-third century."
Huh… are you talking about people who love racehorses or –
"Nah, anthropomorphized space-traveling horses, dude."
Uh, this actually sounds fascinating but 24 POVs? Rilly?
"Totes. 24 3rd person limited POVs"
Okay. Many epics have more than one POV. Indeed, many epics have six to
a dozen…
Here's a
critique you might come across then: "Do you really need all these
POVs?" Or "I stopped reading after chapter three and started skimming
until I got to Yaga the assassin's chapter again."
What it
means: "I totes don't see why I should care about the protag at all, since
I haven't read anything from her POV for like, eight chapters." Or "I
only read Yaga and Mimsy's chapters, so in reality, I only read ten chapters
out of your ninety-five chapter book." (This last comment actually came
from discussions in two writers' group about a current popular fantasy series <names have been changed to protect the yadda>.)
If you're
saying "My WIP is supposed to be romantical and stuff. How do I show what
they feel for each other without using multi?"
Here's the
thing – two POVs can be great. Three or more can be fine. Where it stops
working is when you have so many characters you want the reader to care about,
the multi POVs dilutes the reader's emotional investment.
A story
should be immersive. A step stone to that goal is following a protag that is
relatable, understandable, etc. (not necessarily likeable!). The protag must be
so compelling that a reader cares about the protag enough to turn the page to
find out what happens next, otherwise it might be more appealing to put down your
story in favor of surfing facebook, retweeting what Bob had for breakfast, soaking
in a hot tub with a tumbler of vodka in one hand and fat cigar in the other.
Let's say you
do have a protag (let's call him 1protag) with an awesome mix
of vulnerable roguishness and comic badassery or whatev, and all he wants to do
is save the kingdom from dragons find
his long lost little brother win the
universe horse racing cup. But then you change POVs into his antagonist. Or his
BFF. Or his bastard sister from his philandering father's side who 1protag's
secretly in love with because he doesn't know they're related. Dropping 1protag's
POV can be a gamble. You risk losing a substantial fraction of your reader's
emotional investment in 1protag, and therefore, 1protag's story.
The risk
might be worth it. Perhaps the second POV – let's say it's mum's POV – is just
as compelling and just as integral to the epic plot because she um… I dunno,
secretly wants to kill 1protag in revenge for 1protag's father's roving penis
eye. Having the second POV can increase tension because now you've got the WTF
factor: dramatic irony – audience knows something 1protag doesn't.
But now
you've got another character, who – by virtue of her importance to your epic
plot – deserves just as much development as 1protag. What I mean by this is she
must be a character with her own history, habits, motivations, vocabulary, etc. These are the things
which make her relatable. Otherwise, the fact that she only exists as a gimmick
to provide information becomes obvious.
Ok, now let's
add another POV say… 1protag's BFF, Gina. Same things apply about her – another
personal history (beware the infodump and infologue!), another set of
mannerisms, another set of motives which must be different from the first two,
otherwise, why have her. Gina's necessary because 1protag and mumprotag are
stuck at the king's court family
court the racetrack, but Gina, being
a knight insurance salesman lightspeed racehorse, can travel to
places the other two protags can't. She can be the vehicle for more
information. Yeah, that's it!
So that's a
good … what, another POV? The ancient, super duper evil baddie from Space
Station Omega Delta Blueberry Pi who wants 1protag's right thumb because it
unlocks a dimensional gate between three different time zones? Okaaay...
another personal history, etc. etc.
Oh, and the
baddieprotag's toady.
And
toadyprotag's second cousin horse trainer.
And
baddieprotag's daughter who's secretly in love with 1protag.
That's six
more POV's added. Count backwards from this paragraph. Doesn't seem like much
so far, but that's six paragraphs separating the moment from the main character. In a WIP, that's ideally going
to be six chapter breaks, with several paragraphs in each chapter. Remember
what the protag wanted? Me neither.
Don't even
get me started about trying to query this clusterf*ck.
Anyway, so
you're sure your epic needs multiple POV's. How to handle it? An approach
that's been suggested in my writing group is to write each POV's story from
start to finish. Frex, write 1protag's entire story with events only
experienced from his POV. Next, write mumprotag's entire story. Just hers, no
one else's. Next, write Gina, the BFF's story. Etc. Ideally, each personal
story should be integral to the plot – ie, what one person does affects
multiple story lines. Also, ideally, each personal story should stand alone.
Contradictory? Not so much when you think about it this way: Can each character
live beyond the scenes you allow into your story, or do they only appear
because you have to relay information. Are they pro-active? Or re-active.
Once all POVs
have been written, weave them together at appropriate plot points.
Does this
seem like a sh*t ton of hard work? If you said "Hell yeah!", that's a sign your story probably doesn't need
POV's 4 through 24. It's easy and (imho, lazy) to start the story with one
protag and bring in another character's POV when the first protag starts
getting boring.
Did POVs 8,
12, and 16 just have a chapter or two each, in which they burst into a super
important scene that 1protag, mumprotag, or BFFprotag couldn't be at? That's a
sign you're using characters 8, 12, and 16 as a plot crutch.
Did you dread
writing POV 9, 13, and 20? Cut them. Hold them over a flame. Then dip them in acid.
Do POV 7, 14,
19, and 22 sound like exactly the same people doing different things? Cut them
or merge them into supporting cast members.
If you're
sure you need all 24+ POVs in your racehorse romance epic, then do it. You know
your story. The point of writing it down is to put that story in another
person's head. Multiple POV's can be the important puzzle pieces (you know, the
edges or obviously the eye of a Cyclops, top of a skyscraper) that can help a
reader fill in the larger picture (because the story was bigger than any one
person involved! Woah! Mind=blown!).
But it's a
gamble. Because as 1protag's chapter ends and you put forth 2protag, you're
betting your entire WIP that 2protag's story is just as compelling and
page-turning as 1protag's. Same goes for 3protag to nprotag.
Next week, another Beast: Omni.
No comments:
Post a Comment