Starting your first fiction? Getting close you your main character is a crucial part of writing any story, of any length.
The first thing a writers considers in the point of view they are going to use to write about this main character. If you are not sure how to tackle this technique, do read these two blogpost before you carry on with this one –– about POINT OF VIEW and about the more tricky OMNISCIENT POV
Take a look at something you've already written in a narrator's voice.
Are you missing out on seeing what that narrator is thinking? If so, the result won't help the reader get that connection they need. Take that piece you've just read and try to redraft it, so that the character is thinking, and the reader is seeing what they think. Doing this help you read an intimate point of view which increases empathy and identity for the reader. Now see if you can blur the line between your description and r interior monologue, so that you move effortlessly from seeing the world through your character’s eyes to seeing the world (including action and description) through your character’s mind and back again, as my character, Sabbie Dare, does here;
'Your life is not at risk. I wouldn’t ask you to do this if I thought it was.'
It was the ‘I’ that made me stop. I reconsidered Ivan’s comment about police arriving in pairs. Why was this man alone? 'I want to see your ID again.'
He slid it over the coffee table. I wouldn’t know a fake police badge if it had ‘Counterfeit’ stamped over it, but I rested my hand on the plastic coat and closed my eyes, to see what drifted into my mind. I gained a sensation; a recognition of strength and self-possession. Hidden underneath was a split-second flash of utter fatigue, the sort one associates with huge amounts of health-abuse. But that might be me, stereotyping the guy. Maybe he was a teetotaler.
'You’re smart, Sabbie,' said DS Buckley. 'I’m here on a bit of a hunch. The man we’re interviewing is a puzzle, and I’m hoping you’ll be able to solve it.'
In the Moors Llewellyn International, Midnight Ink
Interior Monologue and POV
In The Art of Fiction. John Gardner explains how the close third person (sometimes called 'limited' or 'subjective' 3rd Person POV) is essentially the same as the first person except that each ‘I’ is changed to ‘she’ or 'he' or 'they'. This is almost the truth, but not quite, and is part of the joy of choosing the right POV in the first place. I chose the write In the Moors in the first person as I did want to drill right down into Sabbie's mind with not the tiniest bit of distance because she uses shamanic techniques, and I was sure she would convince the reader of her use of this technique the better is she spoke directly to them. But there is no doubt that Gardner can be right; think back to the last book you read in a close 3rd Person POV. Did the narrator fully engage? Did you identify, even empathise with them? In that case, the writer managed that clever trick of persuading you to believe in their character, even the they are writing about them, rather than being them. That is…she closed her eyes, to see what drifted into her mind… .rather than....I closed my eyes, to see what drifted into my mind…
Direct and Indirect Interior Monologue
Direct interior monologue tells you the exact thoughts of the character, using exactly the words he is thinking. If, when reading fiction, you see a short burst of italics, you'll know the writer is using a direct interior monologue, although that is their choice, you don't have to do it. However, spotting these italics can really help you understand what is going on with this writer and emulate the technique yourself. Whether this is in italics or not it should be perfectly clear that these are the verbatim words going through the POV character’s mind.
Indirect interior monologue tells the approximate thoughts of the character, without giving the exact words he’s thinking. So far as I know, nobody ever writes these using italics.
Most novelists use both direct and indirect interior monologue, mixing them well, because it just feels better when you do so.
Here's some indirect monologue from In The Moors:
Maybe it was just my lack of breakfast, but I was glad of this reprieve. I needed to think everything through; Cliff’s story, Rey and Ivan, dreams and hens. But instead, I thought about Josh Sutton.
And here's some direct (in italics):
I wasn’t ready to consider Ivan anything more than a casual date. We were as different as a ladybird is from a greenfly.
So long as I was the ladybird.
If you are not getting any, or sufficient interior monologue into your fiction, think about any if the following suggestions;
- Focus on the POV character, ask yourself what are they thinking and feeling
- Now decide if sharing this with your reader will increase connectivity, without spoiling any secrets you want to keep
- Try sharing thoughts on the page
- Read through your writing. Use a highlighter to highlight the Narrative Action, Dialogue and Description. If you can see any Interior Monologue, highlight that in a different colour. Action and Dialogue should show what characters are doing or saying. The Interior Monologue should show what the POV character is thinking or feeling.
- It should also describe, so that we see Description through their eyes. That makes description far more effective.
'Your life is not at risk,' said DS Buckley, hoping what he was saying was true. 'I wouldn’t ask you to do this if I thought it was.'
It was the ‘I’ that made me stop. I reconsidered Ivan’s comment about police arriving in pairs. Why was this man alone? 'I want to see your ID again.'
He slid it over the coffee table, the feel of the plastic cold on his fingers. I wouldn’t know a fake police badge if it had ‘Counterfeit’ stamped over it, but I rested my hand on the plastic coat and closed my eyes, to see what drifted into my mind. I gained a sensation; a recognition of strength and self-possession. Hidden underneath was a split-second flash of utter fatigue, the sort one associates with huge amounts of health-abuse. But that might be me, stereotyping the guy. 'You’re smart, Sabbie.' Buckley meant it – he was attracted to this girl. 'I’m here on a bit of a hunch. The man we’re interviewing is a puzzle, and I’m hoping you’ll be able to solve it.'
Tom Wolfe explains that in his book The Right Stuff, his style was developed to grab the readers' attention, to absorb them. ... He wanted to get into the heads of his characters, even if this was nonfiction. And so, at an astronauts' press conference, he quotes a reporter's question on who was confident about coming back from space. He describes the astronauts looking at one another and hoisting their hands in the air. Then, he's into their heads:
It really made you feel like an idiot, raising your hand this way. If you didn't think you were 'coming back,' then you would really have to be a fool or a nut to have volunteered at all. ...
We will return to the subject of getting in the (right!) character's head in the next STARTING TO WRITE blogpost, when I look at psychic distance.