I’m so pleased to host Melodie Campbell on Mystery Mondays today. Melodie was one of the first authors to connect with me when I started out. She’s generous with her advice. She’s full of encouragement. And she’s an award winning author who also teaches writing.
Check below for Melodie’s newest release, The B-Team. So new, in fact, it just came out this week.
So over to Melodie…
First Person Rocks! Here’s what you need to know about the rules…
By Melodie Campbell
(First published on Sleuthsayers Crime Blog in the U.S., 2017)
The rules, the rules…
Always, in my Sheridan College Crafting a Novel class, beginning students are alarmed to find out there are rules to writing.
I’m not keen on rules in general. After all, I became a writer so I could thumb my nose at reality, right? Control the world of my fiction in a way I can’t control real life.
All that said (and I could make a blog post out of just that line above) there ARE rules to writing. A bunch of middle-aged guys behind a baize-covered door didn’t make them up for no reason (double negative – Ha! Rule-breaker, you.)
The rules are there for a purpose. They’re all about logic. Here is one that is perhaps least understood. You don’t have to follow it (more on that later.) But you do need to understand why it is a rule, so that you know the consequences of breaking it.
WRITING IN FIRST PERSON:
Many, many people don’t know the rules of first person viewpoint. So here goes:
The protagonist becomes the narrator. As a writer, you make a promise to the reader. (Remember that phrase: promise to the reader.) In first person, the character that is telling you their story is telling it directly to you. No third party writing it. You are in her head.
I love first person. I *become* the protagonist when reading or writing first person. Studies confirm this. Readers become more involved in the story and protagonist when reading first person. That’s what makes first person rock. In my books <sic> it’s the ultimate escape.
But first person has huge limitations for the writer: the person telling the story must be in every scene. Otherwise, they won’t know what is going on in that scene and can’t convey it to the reader (unless you employ a second person to run back and forth, telling the protagonist. Note the use of the word ‘tell.’ Telling is ho-hum. You won’t want to do that often.)
If your story is in first person, you can’t be switching to another character’s viewpoint. Ever. Nope, not even another viewpoint in first person. Why? Because your reader thinks this: “What the poop is happening here? The book started in first person. The protagonist is supposed to be telling me the story. Now someone else is telling it. What happened to my beloved protagonist? Are the original protagonist and protagonist number two sitting next to each other at twin desks writing the story at the same time and passing it back and forth? This doesn’t make sense.”
In a phrase, you’ve broken your promise to the reader.
So here’s what to do: if you need to write the story in more than one viewpoint in order to show every scene, write the whole story in third person. Then you can change viewpoints as needed.
One more first person restriction: if your protagonist is telling the story directly, then he can’t die at the end of the story. This should be obvious: if he died, who wrote the darn manuscript?
Finally, do NOT write a first person story and have the viewpoint character a surprise murderer at the end! We are supposed to be in his/her head. Logically, we would know.
Okay, those are the rules. You can write what you want, of course. That’s the delight of being an author. I’m sure you’ll be able to name a few crime books that break the rules of viewpoint.
But in my class, you will hear this: The rules are there for a reason. Of course you can break the rules, but if you do, you will lose something (usually reader continuity and engagement.) It’s up to you to decide if you gain more by breaking the rules than you lose by doing so. BUT: If you break them in your first novel, publishers (and readers) will think you don’t KNOW the rules.
So at least go in knowing the rules. And then do what you damn well please.
Final words: Don’t publish too soon. Take the time to learn your craft. And then…be fearless.
About Melodie Campbell
The Toronto Sun called her Canada’s “Queen of Comedy.” Library Journal compared her to Janet Evanovich. Melodie Campbell has won the Derringer, the Arthur Ellis Award, and eight more awards for crime fiction. Last year, Melodie made the Top 50 Amazon Bestseller list, sandwiched between Tom Clancy and Nora Roberts. She is the past Executive Director of Crime Writers of Canada. Her 13th book, The B-Team, launches this week. It’s in first person.
- http://www.melodiecampbell.com
- Melodie Campbell, Author, on Facebook
- @melodiecampbell
THE B-TEAM!
They do wrong for all the right reasons…and sometimes it even works.
Perhaps you’ve heard of The A-Team? Vietnam vets turned vigilantes? They had a television show a while back.
We’re not them.
But if you’ve been the victim of a scam, give us a call. We deal in justice, not the law.
We’re the B-Team.
Great post Melodie. Of course, we’ve had this conversation — there are examples of authors who have successfully broken / break the rules. Gillian Flynn in Gone Girl has 2, and possibly 3 if you count the diary, 1st person POV, and Louise Penny’ style is that she routinely head hops, but manages to get away with it. Both authors, of course, are highly skilled at the craft, and so by breaking the rules, they’ve set new rules. But for the mere mortal, the rules are a good thing to follow! Good luck with your new release.
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Thanks for commenting, Judy! Yes, some people don’t even know or notice when the rules are broken. Other readers are thrown out of the story immediately. I think my goal is to let students know the logic behind these conventions.
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Reblogged this on Mesdames of Mayhem and commented:
Mme Melodie Campbell is a guest on Kristina Stanley’s blog today and shares some great tips about writing!
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Thank you for sharing.
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My most successful work is a series in which the chapters are written alternately in Third Person and First Person. This can be very freeing in what it allows an author to communicate and it also creates a sense of immediacy, but at the same time challenging as First Person is a very restrictive POV in terms of the experience of the events that can be passed to the reader. Needs a careful touch.
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Thanks for commenting, Will! Yes, first person is restrictive. I love it though. I love to be in the head of one person only throughout a story. It becomes their story then, and not the author’s. Not all readers want that immediacy though. I’m glad there are readers for all of us.
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