First Person: Intimacy at a Cost

Do

Commit to the voice fully. The narrator’s personality should be present in how they describe a sunset as much as how they describe a fight. If you can swap out the narrator and the prose sounds the same, the voice isn’t specific enough.

Avoid

Using first person as a shortcut to interiority. Readers still need to feel things, not just be told what the narrator feels. “I was scared” is not first person doing its job. The specific physical sensation, the wrong thought at the wrong moment, the detail that only this narrator would notice at this timeβ€”that’s first person doing its job.

From My Work

Third Person: Distance as a Tool

Do

Use the distance deliberately. If you’re writing close third and suddenly pulling back to an omniscient observation, there should be a reason. The shift in distance is a tool, and it lands when it’s intentional.

Avoid

Head-hopping without control. Shifting from one character’s interiority to another’s within a scene without clear transitions pulls readers out of the story because they lose their footing. Pick whose head you’re in and stay there until the scene break.

From My Work

When the POV Carries the Theme

Do

Let the POV reinforce what the story is about. The best POV choices feel inevitable in retrospect.

Avoid

Choosing a POV because it feels easier. First person isn’t easier because it’s more intimate. Third person isn’t easier because it’s more flexible. Both have demands. The right choice is the one the story requires.

Final Thoughts

Extras