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jessifanfic 
OTL Webmistress, and Owner.
Posts: 19
(5/25/01 11:12 am)


Articles for potential writers
I just thought you might find some of these articles helpful as you thought about writing for the magazine - and also for your fan fiction, even though that can't be put into the magazine.

Jessi
Operation True Love
Jessi's Websites

jessifanfic 
OTL Webmistress, and Owner.
Posts: 20
(5/25/01 11:18 am)


Article on POV in Writing
by Robert J. Sawyer Than One
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Copyright © 1996 by Robert J. Sawyer. All rights reserved.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

New writers are often baffled when trying to choose a point of view for their stories and novels. But, actually, the choice is easy. Over ninety percent of all modern speculative fiction is written using the same POV: limited third person.

"Third person" ("she did this; he did that") means the story is not told in first person ("I did this"), or the always-irritating second person ("you did this"). That's easy enough. But what does "limited" mean?

It means that although the narration refers to all the characters by third-person pronouns (he, she, it), each self-contained scene follows the viewpoint of one specific character. Consider this example, which is not limited but rather is omniscient third person, in which the unseen narrator knows what all the characters are thinking:


"Hello, Mrs. Spade. I'm Pierre Tardivel." He was conscious of how out-of-place his ébécoisQu accent must have sounded here -- another reminder that he was intruding. For a moment, Mrs. Spade thought she recognized Pierre.

In the opening of the paragraph, we are inside Pierre's head: "He was conscious of how out-of-place . . ." But by the end of the paragraph, we've left Pierre's head and are now inside another character's: "Mrs. Spade thought she recognized Pierre."

Here's the same paragraph rewritten as limited third person, solely from Pierre's point of view.


"Hello, Mrs. Spade. I'm Pierre Tardivel." He was conscious of how out-of-place his ébécoisQu accent must have sounded here -- another reminder that he was intruding. There was a moment while Mrs. Spade looked Pierre up and down during which Pierre thought he saw a flicker of recognition on her face.

See the difference? We stay firmly rooted inside Pierre's head. Pierre is only aware of what Mrs. Spade is thinking because she gives an outward sign ("a flicker of recognition on her face") that he can interpret.

Think of your story's reader as a little person who rides inside the head of one of your characters. When inside a given head, the reader can see, hear, touch, smell, and taste everything that particular character is experiencing, and he or she can also read the thoughts of that one
character. But it takes effort for the little person to move out of one head and into another. Not only that -- it's disorienting. Consider this:

Keith smiled at Lianne. She was a gorgeous woman, with a wonderfully curvy figure.

All right: we're settling in for an encounter with a woman from a man's point of view. But if the next paragraph says:


Lianne smiled at Keith. He was a handsome man, with a body-builder's physique.

Hey, wait a minute! Suddenly we've jumped into another head, and immersed ourselves in a whole 'nuther set of emotions and feelings. Not only have we lost track of where we are, we've lost track of who we are -- of which
character we're supposed to identify with. Although at first glance, omniscient narration might seem an ideal way to involve the reader in every aspect of the story, it actually ends up making the reader feel unconnected
to all the characters. The rule is simple: pick one character, and follow the entire scene through his or her eyes only.

Of course, we usually want some idea of what the other characters in the scene are thinking or feeling. That can be accomplished with effective description. To convey puzzlement on the part of someone other than your
viewpoint character, write "he scratched his chin" or "she raised an eyebrow" (or, if you really want to hit the reader over the head with it, "she raised an eyebrow quizzically" -- "quizzically" being the viewpoint
character's interpretation of the action). To convey anger, write "he balled his hands into fists," or "his cheeks grew flushed," or "he raised his voice." There are very few emotions that aren't betrayed by outward signs.
(This harks back to the show-don't-tell rule, which I talked about in my Winter 1995 On Writing column.)

Still, in real life, there are times when you can't tell what someone else is thinking -- usually because that person is making a deliberate effort to keep a poker face. If you've adopted the omniscient point of view, instead
of a limited one, you can't portray such things effectively. Here's a limited point of view:


Carlos looked at Wendy, unsure whether he should go on. Her face was a stony mask. "I'm sorry," he said again. "So very sorry."

That's much more intriguing than the omniscient version:

Carlos looked at Wendy, unsure whether he should go on. Wendy thought Carlos had suffered enough and was going to forgive him, but for the moment she didn't say anything. "I'm sorry," he said again. "So very sorry."

In the former, we feel Carlos's insecurity, and we have some suspense about how things are going to turn out. In the latter, there is no suspense. (And, of course, omniscient narration is death -- if you'll pardon the
expression -- in mystery fiction: the reader must be kept ignorant of what the various suspects are thinking, or else it will be obvious which one is guilty.)

Note that I've suggested keeping in one character's head for each individual scene. However, you can freely switch viewpoint characters when you change scenes (either at the end of a chapter, or with a blank line within a chapter). Many novels have separate plotlines intertwined, with each of them having its own viewpoint character. But what happens when individuals who have been viewpoint characters in disparate plotlines come together in the same scene? Whose POV do you choose then?

In most cases, it'll be whichever one is at the heart of the action of that particular scene. But there are exceptions. One big one is when someone who has been a point-of-view character is about to die. See, the central conceit of modern fiction is that it's actually a form of journalism: the tale you are reading is an account of something that really happened, and the author's job has simply been to interview one witness per scene to the
events being described. Well, if your main character dies in a scene, how did he or she subsequently relate his or her feelings to the journalist-author? Even if the dying character has been your viewpoint character throughout most of the story, it's best to be inside another person's head as you watch him or her expire.

(One of the great violations of the journalistic-storytelling model comes from the movie Citizen Kane, which, ironically, is a film about journalism: the whole movie revolves around trying to discover the meaning of Charles Foster Kane's dying word, "Rosebud." But the film clearly shows Kane dying alone, with no one witnessing him saying it. Unless you're a genius comparable to Orson Welles, don't try to get away with this in your own
fiction.)

There are other times when you'll want to choose someone besides your protagonist as the POV character for a scene or two. No person really knows how he or she is perceived; you may find it illuminating to do an occasional scene from a secondary character's point of view, so that the reader can see your hero as others do. Philip K. Dick did this brilliantly in The Man in the High Castle. One of the novel's main characters, Ed McCarthy, is trying to interest a merchant, Robert Childan, in buying some jewelry he and his partner have designed. Ed seems clever and in control in the scenes leading up to the sales pitch to the merchant -- but when it comes time for the actual pitch, Dick plants us firmly inside the merchant's head, and we see
Ed McCarthy in a new light:

[McCarthy] wore a slightly-less-than fashionable suit. His voice had a strangled quality. He'll lay everything out, Childan knew. Watching me out of the corner of his eye every second. To see if I'm taking any interest. Any at all.

For each scene, choose your point-of-view character with care. Stick with that one person throughout the scene -- and you'll find that readers are sticking with your story all the way until the end.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

According to Maclean's: Canada's Weekly Newsmagazine, "By any reckoning Robert J. Sawyer is among the most successful Canadian authors ever." He has sold 15 novels to major U.S. publishers and received 24 national and international awards for his fiction, including the Science Fiction and
Fantasy Writers of America's Nebula Award for Best Novel of the Year, and the Crime Writers of Canada's Arthur Ellis Award for Best Short Story of the Year.

Rob has taught creative writing at the University of Toronto, Ryerson Polytechnic University, and the Banff Centre for the Arts.

Jessi
Operation True Love
Jessi's Websites

Edited by: jessifanfic  at: 5/25/01 2:19:24 pm
jessifanfic 
OTL Webmistress, and Owner.
Posts: 21
(5/25/01 11:18 am)


Show, Don't Tell
Show, Don't Tell
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Copyright © 1995 by Robert J. Sawyer. All rights reserved.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Every writing student has heard the rule that you should show, not tell, but
this principle seems to be among the hardest for beginners to master.

First, what's the difference between the two? Well, "telling" is the
reliance on simple exposition: Mary was an old woman. "Showing," on the
other hand, is the use of evocative description: Mary moved slowly across
the room, her hunched form supported by a polished wooden cane gripped in a
gnarled, swollen-jointed hand that was covered by translucent, liver-spotted
skin.

Both showing and telling convey the same information -- Mary is old -- but
the former simply states it flat-out, and the latter -- well, read the
example over again and you'll see it never actually states that fact at all,
and yet nonetheless leaves no doubt about it in the reader's mind.

Why is showing better? Two reasons. First, it creates mental pictures for
the reader. When reviewers use terms like "vivid," "evocative," or
"cinematic" to describe a piece of prose, they really mean the writer has
succeeded at showing, rather than merely telling.

Second, showing is interactive and participatory: it forces the reader to
become involved in the story, deducing facts (such as Mary's age) for
himself or herself, rather than just taking information in passively.

Let's try a more complex example:

Singh had a reputation for being able to cut through layers of bureaucracy
and get things done.

Doubtless a useful chap to have around, this Singh, but he's rather a dull
fellow to read about. Try this instead:

Chang shook his head and looked at Pryce. "All this red tape! We'll never
get permission in time."

Suddenly the office door slid open, and in strode Singh, a slight lifting at
the corners of his mouth conveying his satisfaction. He handed a ROM chip to
Chang. "Here you are, sir -- complete government clearance. You can launch
anytime you wish."

Chang's eyebrows shot up his forehead like twin rockets, but Singh was
already out the door. He turned to Pryce, who was leaning back in his chair,
grinning. "That's our Singh for you," said Pryce. "We don't call him the
miracle worker for nothing."

In the first version, Singh is spoken about in the abstract, while in the
second, we see him in the concrete. That's the key to showing: using
specific action-oriented examples to make your point. When writing a
romantic scene, don't tell us that John is attracted to Sally; show us that
his heart skips a beat when she enters the room. It's rarely necessary to
tell us about your characters' emotions. Let their actions convey how they
feel instead.

(Notice that at the end of the second Singh version above, Pryce tells us
about Singh. That's a special case: it's fine for one of your characters to
say what he or she thinks of another; in fact, that's a good way to reveal
characterization for both the person being spoken about and the person doing
the speaking.)

Speaking of speaking (so to speak), a great way to show rather than tell is
through dialog:

Telling: Alex was an uneducated man.

Showing: "I ain't goin' nowhere," said Alex.

Likewise, using modified speech to show a character's regional or ethnic
origin can be quite effective, if done sparingly:

Telling: "It's a giant spaceship with the biggest engines I've ever seen,"
said Koslov in a thick Russian accent.

Showing: "It is giant spaceship with biggest engines I have ever seen," said
Koslov.

The failure to use contractions shows us Koslov is uncomfortable with the
language; the dropping of the articles "the" and "a" shows us that he's
likely a Russian-speaker, a fact confirmed by his name. The reader hears the
accent without you telling him that the character has one.

Don't overdo this, though. One of my favorite non-SF writers is Ed McBain,
but frequently when he wants to demonstrate that a character is black, he
descends into pages of offensively stereotypical Amos 'n' Andy dialog.
Here's a character in McBain's Rumpelstiltskin musing on the local
constabulary: "P'lice always say somebody done nothing a'tall, den next
t'ing you know, they 'resting somebody."

Are there any times when telling is better than showing? Yes. First, some
parts of a story are trivial -- you may want your reader to know a fact,
without dwelling on it. If the weather is only incidental to the story, then
it's perfectly all right to simply tell the reader "it was snowing." Indeed,
if you were to show every little thing, the reader would say your story is
padded.

Second, there's nothing wrong with relying on telling in your first drafts;
I do this myself. When you're working out the sequence of events and the
relationships between characters, it may cause you to lose sight of the big
picture if you stop at that point to carefully craft your descriptions:

First draft: It was a typical blue-collar apartment.

Final draft: She led the way into the living room. It had only two
bookcases, one holding bowling trophies and the other mostly CDs. There was
a paperback book splayed open face down on the coffee table -- a Harlequin
Romance. Copies of The National Enquirer and TV Guide sat atop a television
set that looked about fifteen years old.

Note that showing usually requires more words than telling; the examples of
the latter in this column take up 51 words, whereas those of the former
total 210. Many beginning writers are daunted by the prospect of producing a
long work, but once they master showing rather than telling, they find that
the pages pile up quickly.

The third place where you'll still want to do a lot of telling is in the
outlines for novels. Patrick Nielsen Hayden, a senior editor at Tor Books,
says that some of the best outlines he's ever received contain lines such
as, "Then a really exciting battle occurs." If the editor buys your book, he
or she is trusting that you know how to convert such general statements into
specific, action-oriented, colourful prose.

Finally, of course, showing is also better than telling in the process of
becoming a writer. Don't tell your friends and family that you want to be a
writer; rather, show them that you are one by planting yourself in front of
your keyboard and going to work . . .

Jessi
Operation True Love
Jessi's Websites

EviePJlvr
Started Operation True Love
Posts: 43
(5/25/01 12:55 pm)


Re: Show, Don't Tell
I love you, Jessi! Thank you for posting this!

HAHAHA.. Now, I'm going to make everyone read it.

HeYSuGaR6814
Loves Pacey and Joey
Posts: 19
(5/25/01 9:36 pm)


Re: Show, Don't Tell
Cool thanx for those Jessi

Maz4PJ
Loves Pacey and Joey
Posts: 4
(5/31/01 3:17 am)


Re: Show, Don't Tell
Wow thanks for that Jessi. Those are really helpful.

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