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1st person POV questions

PotomacBob 🚫

Trying to write 1st person POV, with the tale being narrated by an 80-year-old, looking back over a very active life.
The narrator kept a journal and is using it as a source for writing the story, plus newspaper stories, letters written and received from friends and acquaintances, along with historical documents available from libraries.
The personal observances are easy to write: "I saw the Sparrow kill Cock Robin with his bow and arrow."
But how would a 1st person narrator incorporate into the story historical events, i.e., "Donald Trump was elected president in 2016." How could a narrator include something from a government report authored by someone else. How could a narrator refer to something that happened, say 50 years ago, that the narrator did not personally see, but that was revealed fairly recently when maybe a classified document was declassified.

JoeBobMack 🚫

@PotomacBob

How did the narrator learn of the matter?
What was the emotional effect on the narrator of learning?
What meaning does he now (at eighty) assign that knowledge?

Wouldn't the answer to those questions affect how he would weave that information into the account?

For commonly known historical events, he could just state them as fact. "Trump was elected President in 2016." Or, he could state the impact of that event on his life story, either giving him hope or plunging him into despair, or somewhere in between, depending on political views.

AmigaClone 🚫

@PotomacBob

But how would a 1st person narrator incorporate into the story historical events, i.e., "Donald Trump was elected president in 2016." How could a narrator include something from a government report authored by someone else. How could a narrator refer to something that happened, say 50 years ago, that the narrator did not personally see, but that was revealed fairly recently when maybe a classified document was declassified.

I would personally focus on how the narrator felt and his reactions to those events. Those events where he was involved might affect him more than others of course.

For instance, if he was one of the soldiers who were part of D-Day in Europe, he might have a certain reaction, listening to that event on the radio might provoke a second one, someone who was born 25 years after D-day reading about it in high school might provoke a third.

Replies:   irvmull
irvmull 🚫
Updated:

@AmigaClone

How could a narrator refer to something that happened, say 50 years ago, that the narrator did not personally see, but that was revealed fairly recently when maybe a classified document was declassified.

"Back in 2015, we were all upset by the thought that Hillary's emails might have leaked classified information to the enemy.

When they were finally released in 2022, we were relieved to find that they were just lists of people who were going to commit suicide in the near future."

Switch Blayde 🚫

@PotomacBob

How could a narrator refer to something that happened, say 50 years ago, that the narrator did not personally see

"The Green Mile" is written in 1st-person by a very old narrator reflecting on something that happened in the past. Stephen King wrote something like: "I found out later, after reading the report, that…"

Replies:   awnlee_jawking
awnlee_jawking 🚫

@Switch Blayde

Stephen King wrote something like: "I found out later, after reading the report, that…"

It sounds as though @PotomacBob would have to use that technique a lot. Would first person omni work?

AJ

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde 🚫

@awnlee_jawking

Would first person omni work?

He specifically said the 1st-person narrator is an 80-yo looking back.

Because he's looking back, he has pretty much unlimited information. Just like I can talk about the Spanish Flu even though I wasn't alive back then. It's common knowledge. The narrator doesn't have to be all-knowing (omni). He just has to know what happened in the past.

An all-knowing (omni) narrator can tell you what's happening in the present time in the story that the 1st-person narrator wouldn't know. Like what the person he was narrating the story to was thinking. But that wasn't the question.

awnlee_jawking 🚫

@Switch Blayde

An all-knowing (omni) narrator can tell you what's happening in the present time in the story that the 1st-person narrator wouldn't know.

Am I missing the point? Couldn't a 1st omni narrator reveal things from a secret report that they didn't even know existed at the time?

AJ

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde 🚫

@awnlee_jawking

Am I missing the point? Couldn't a 1st omni narrator reveal things from a secret report that they didn't even know existed at the time?

Sure. Omni = all-knowing.

PotomacBob 🚫

@Switch Blayde

The narrator doesn't have to be all-knowing (omni). He just has to know what happened in the past.

I would very much like to avoid a construction like "I wasn't alive then,so have no personal knowledge, but my great-grandfather was alive and he told me the world went to war when he was a young man and they called it World War Two." I'd like for the narrator to be able to say something like, "My great grandfather fought in world war two, my grandfather in Vietnam" without all the limits I see authors on this forum say must be applied to first person POV, where the narrator can only write what they personally observed.

Replies:   irvmull  Switch Blayde
irvmull 🚫
Updated:

@PotomacBob

Someone has badly mislead you regarding first-person POV.

You don't have to have fought in WWII or 'Nam to talk about them. You don't even need to have been alive during those times.

Even a grade-school kid has heard of those, and may have heard from his grandpa! He'd say just what you wrote: "My great grandfather fought in world war two, my grandfather in Vietnam"

As for previously unknown info: "When we cleaned out GrandPa's house, we found his medals..., awards for things he had never talked about."

If there remain a few people who are ignorant of such momentous events, they are probably Evergreen College graduates, and not worth worrying about.

Switch Blayde 🚫

@PotomacBob

where the narrator can only write what they personally observed.

Not observed. Knows.

They may know it from observing it. But they may know it from hearing about it or learning about it or reading about it. They may know it because it's common knowledge, like the stock market crash in 1929. You didn't have to be alive in 1929 to know the market crashed.

The way you want to write it is the way it should be written. The narrator knows his great grandfather and grandfather fought in those wars so he can tell it. That's not all-knowing. That's knowing.

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg 🚫

@Switch Blayde

where the narrator can only write what they personally observed.

Not observed. Knows.

The key here, is that he's observing about events when he learns of them, recollecting other events in relation to them. He's not Omniscent himself, he's just reflecting on the things that he's learned over the course of his life. So, it's best not to reveal every single detail in the book, only the things he'd either witness, was told, or heard about later, and keep them straight, because it's vital the sources are acknowledged by the narrator.

The tricky bit though, is the difficulty employing flashbacks. Personal recollections is one thing (ex: "Hearing that, it reminded me of Grandpa saying …"), but things that were only related by the participants in the story while he wasn't there should be kept separate (ex: "Peter confessed he did it, years later, when he was in a drunken haze.").

The other tricky bit is to keep the narrative flowing forward, so the readers knows where he is, and isn't confused by the narrator jumping back and forth. It's find to 'recall' something, but don't dedicate an entire chapter to something that happened twenty or thirty years ago, as it'll seem forced, and will generally confuse the story.

Just as authors need to be aware of the story's pacing, they also need to be aware of the current moment and the flow of events. Leapfrogging back and forth in time completely undermines that sense of timeliness, making a jumble of the complete story. Often, it's best leaving details blurry, rather than accounting for every single detail in the story.

Switch Blayde 🚫

@Vincent Berg

Just as authors need to be aware of the story's pacing, they also need to be aware of the current moment and the flow of events. Leapfrogging back and forth in time completely undermines that sense of timeliness, making a jumble of the complete story.

"Prince of Tides" is told through flashbacks. The book even had more than the movie. There's no jumble.

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg 🚫

@Switch Blayde

"Prince of Tides" is told through flashbacks. The book even had more than the movie. There's no jumble.

Yes, flashbacks can work, and work well, but they're not easy to carry off, and I've found that only certain stories are suitable for it, while the others generally aren't. So, until to learn to differentiate those subtle difference, it's best to stick with a linear progression, that way, the various flashbacks have a linear progression, that than ping-ponging the reader back and forth. But context is king in these regards, the reader needs a consistent context, otherwise the story slips through their fingers dripping away and soiling their shoes.

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde 🚫

@Vincent Berg

Yes, flashbacks can work, and work well, but they're not easy to carry off, and I've found that only certain stories are suitable for it,

I just watched the movie "For the Love of the Game" and it's also told through flashbacks.

I agree, it's hard.

PotomacBob 🚫

@Vincent Berg

but don't dedicate an entire chapter to something that happened twenty or thirty years ago, as it'll seem forced, and will generally confuse the story.

So, narrators who are 80 cannot devote a whole chapter to, say, their own sixth grade, even though it is important because of the influence it on on their later life. To me, that sounds like an unnecessary restriction. Why should that be a rule?

Vincent Berg 🚫

@PotomacBob

So, narrators who are 80 cannot devote a whole chapter to, say, their own sixth grade, even though it is important because of the influence it on on their later life. To me, that sounds like an unnecessary restriction. Why should that be a rule?

As everyone knows, there are no RULES in publishing. Whatever you can get away worth is considered legitimate, though traditional publishing houses would beg to differ. But I never intended to set limits on anyone. Instead, I'm merely advising newbie authors to initially watch their step. A chronological narrative (pick a point in time, then do mini flashbacks before returning to that timespan appears to be the easiest to carry off.

Also, as noted, certain books are simply more suited to flashbacks than others, though honestly, I can't formulate a way to list what makes it so. All I know is that, if the book is not suited for it, you're probably going to waste months trying to 'prop up' the multiple flashbacks and flash forwards, only to end with an unmanageable mess at the end (based on my own experiences, and the various books I've read which employ them).

As always, if you have a knack for flashbacks, then knock yourself out. Otherwise, your muses should seriously start waving warning flags when you first begin considering it. But, IMHO, limiting flashbacks to one consistent 'chronological narrative' seems like a handy, safe compromise. Again, there's no Rule against doing it, but they simply become more problematic if the timeline just jumps around, confusing the readers as to what's actually happening.

I've dumped a few books that've done that unsuccessfully, while I can count those who've done it successfully on one or possibly two hands.

P.S. Prologues and Epilogues are exempted, of course, since they typically take place outside the 'normal' scope of the story anyway.

awnlee jawking 🚫

@PotomacBob

It's easy to imagine a scenario in which the protagonist seeds a pivotal, lifelong relationship in sixth grade, whether good, bad or bumping uglies, in which case it's quite necessary to show how the fledgling starts and develops.

It's your story. Tell it as you see fit and feel free to ignore any would-be experts who tell you otherwise.

AJ

Uther Pendragon 🚫

@Switch Blayde

An all-knowing (omni) narrator

Don't take that term too literally. A 3rdperson omni narrator knows what several people think.

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg 🚫

@Uther Pendragon

Don't take that term too literally. A 3rdperson omni narrator knows what several people think.

That's why I prefer, when first starting a book, to define who the narrator is. I rarely acknowledge it in the story itself, but I find it easier to provide the narrator with their own literary 'voice', which it also helps define just what they'd know at any given point in the story.

Uther Pendragon 🚫

@PotomacBob

I think you're letting the name overcome your common sense.
External events are inherently third person. For that matter, so are many very personal events. "Mary kissed me softly." Not, "I was kissed softly by Mary."
It's a first-person story ; it's not a story of first-person sentences.
Technically, the Sherlock Holmes stories a first-person

Replies:   Mat Twassel
Mat Twassel 🚫

@Uther Pendragon

External events are inherently third person. For that matter, so are many very personal events. "Mary kissed me softly." Not, "I was kissed softly by Mary."

Both are first person, the first active voice, the second passive.

As for what a first person narrator can know, first person narrators are notorious liars.

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg 🚫

@Mat Twassel

As for what a first person narrator can know, first person narrators are notorious liars.

Beyond the occasional lying narrator, how many people do any of us truly know who isn't somehow 'deceiving themselves' on a number of fronts? Should a reader ever trust a narrator, or an author? They have their own idea of how the story plays out, but if a reader objects to their assumptions, just how meaningful is their perspective anyways?

LupusDei 🚫
Updated:

@PotomacBob

I think a crucial decision is, when is the "now" of the story? Does the story happens when the narrator is 80, informed by 70 years of personal history -- then a story told in flashbacks is what you likely get. If the story is set when the narrator was 14, told from then forward, then you have linear story where narrator -- but not the point of view character -- possess a wealth of future or contextual information the narrator may use to make fun of the clueless boy he had been or otherwise entertain the reader, but it must be held clear the story character decisionmaking isn't and cannot be informed by that knowledge. Narrator and PoV character both present as "I" but are different entities; while narrator can be omniscient to an arbitrary degree, the PoV character isn't.

I don't think there's necessity of convoluted constructions, at least as long the (snarky, all knowing, for example, or whatever) remarks from a different era has enough difference in voice they can be disentangled from POV character's direct thoughts.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@LupusDei

I think a crucial decision is, when is the "now" of the story? Does the story happens when the narrator is 80, informed by 70 years of personal history -- then a story told in flashbacks is what you likely get.

There's also a story within a story construct, where you actually show the narrator sitting down to tell the inner story to someone else. Personally, I wouldn't call that flashbacks.

Replies:   LupusDei  Vincent Berg
LupusDei 🚫
Updated:

@Dominions Son

Yes, but in that case, usually it is that inner story that matters, the outer wrapper just a way to establish the difference between the "I" narrator and "I" character of the inner story about the young man the teller had been. If, in contrary, the main story is primary about the 80 year old, but what they did half a century ago still matters a lot, them teaching an apprentice (or whatever secondary character mostly existing as recipient of his anecdotes meant primary to inform the reader) would be, perhaps cleverly wrapped, but still effectively flashbacks.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@LupusDei

The story within a story also offers other opportunities to convey information the narrator learned later, by popping out to scenes where the narrator is speaking with his audience.

LupusDei 🚫
Updated:

@Dominions Son

Well, if you're building meta-story scene for what omniscient narrator could probably accomplish in a paragraph, it better to matter a lot for the meta story.

Flash-forward is as valid as flashback and that's just a extreme form of how to delimit one.

Things like, for example,

Yeah, and then she went to Princeton and became highly paid lawyer and was in south tower at 9/11. We not as much as talked after that day.

are common in oral storytelling and don't need to leave the story proper, while can recolor prior scenes quite dramatically.

LupusDei 🚫
Updated:

@Dominions Son

The story within a story also offers other opportunities to convey information the narrator learned later, by popping out to scenes where the narrator is speaking with his audience.

Well, actually, you may have a point. It might be fun for a listener to correct the teller, for example, or some such. But those are edge cases and not unavoidable either, in my opinion.

Vincent Berg 🚫

@Dominions Son

The story within a story also offers other opportunities to convey information the narrator learned later, by popping out to scenes where the narrator is speaking with his audience.

Its handy, but its also as annoying as hell to readers!

Dominions Son 🚫

@Vincent Berg

but its also as annoying as hell to readers!

To some readers. You can't authoritatively say anything but how you personally would react as a reader. You have no basis for generalizing that.

Switch Blayde 🚫

@Vincent Berg

but its also as annoying as hell to readers!

Why?

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@Switch Blayde

Why?

For the same sort of reason as readers generally find other forms of hopping (eg head-hopping, time-hopping) to be annoying. It interrupts the flow of their reading.

AJ

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde 🚫

@awnlee jawking

It interrupts the flow of their reading.

Not if done correctly.

Vincent Berg 🚫

@Dominions Son

Personally, I wouldn't call that flashbacks.

Technically, the point where you present the narrator relating the story could be either the present (if it's at the end of the story) or a flash forward if it's at the beginning.

BlacKnight 🚫

@PotomacBob

I'm just going to drop a link to the last time you posted this thread.

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg 🚫

@BlacKnight

I'm just going to drop a link to the last time you posted this thread.

A wonderful example of flashbacks!

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