| name | novel-perspective |
| description | Choose the right perspective (POV) and tense for a novel. Use this skill when the user wants to decide between first person and third person, choose a narrative perspective, figure out their novel's point of view, understand the difference between omniscient and limited third person, fix head-jumping problems, or needs help with POV consistency. Also use when someone is struggling with whose eyes the reader should see through, or when they're mixing perspectives unintentionally. |
Novel Perspective Chooser
Help the writer choose and understand the perspective that best serves their story. Perspective is everything in a novel -- a mishmash of perspectives is one of the most common problems in unpublished manuscripts and can sink even great plots and characters.
The goal is to produce or update an OpenTales ProjectDoc for the perspective plan that clarifies the writer's perspective choices and gives them the understanding to maintain consistency throughout.
Perspective Is Not Just A Technical Fix
Do not treat perspective as a rule-compliance problem only.
Yes, you must help the writer avoid head-jumping, tense chaos, and reader confusion. But the harder question is: why does this story need this perspective?
Always connect POV choice to pressure:
- What version of reality is each narrator trying to preserve?
- What self-lie shapes the way they tell the story?
- What shame, appetite, blind spot, or need becomes visible only in this perspective?
- What does this mode let the reader feel that another mode would flatten?
- If there are multiple POVs, how do they not just add information, but damage each other's versions of reality?
Do not justify a perspective by saying it is "the X model" from another famous book. The structure must emerge from the novel's own deepest pressure, not from homage.
Why Perspective Matters So Much
Think about starting a novel. The reader is essentially in a completely dark room, and the writer slowly fills in details to bring the world to life. The reader needs to know where to situate their consciousness within a scene. Are we in one person's head? Looking over someone's shoulder? Seeing everything from above?
It can be any of these -- but it cannot be a disorienting jumble that forces the reader to constantly re-evaluate whose perspective they're seeing events from. That's exhausting mental labor. The reader should settle in like a happy passenger.
The cardinal rule: Choose a perspective and stick with it.
But consistency does not mean lifelessness. A good perspective plan should create tension between what is told, what is omitted, and what the narrator cannot stop revealing anyway.
The Two Tense Choices
- Past tense ("He said," "I said") -- the more classic approach
- Present tense ("He says," "I say") -- feels more modern, conveys immediacy
Either works. The only rule: stick with the one you choose. Mixing tenses (e.g., present for "now" scenes and past for flashbacks) almost always confuses readers. Just pick one.
If the writer keeps "accidentally" slipping tense during intense moments, treat that as diagnostic information. Usually they do not need a new tense system -- they need more proximity, more scene pressure, or a clearer reason the story is being told now.
The Four Perspectives
First Person ("I did this, I did that")
How it works:
Everything is filtered through the narrator's personality and perspective. The reader only sees what the narrator sees. This creates a unique tension between what the narrator says and what the reader senses is actually happening.
Think of it as: reality (slightly hidden) -> || prism || -> narrator's perspective (what reader sees)
Strengths:
- Deep intimacy with the narrator
- Fascinating to see the world filtered through a unique personality
- Can make implausible plots feel realistic (e.g., Kazuo Ishiguro's Never Let Me Go)
- The gap between what the narrator says and reality creates rich tension
Constraints:
- We only see what the narrator sees -- hard to show "offstage" events
- Everything must be believably filtered through one person's POV
- The narrator must be compelling enough to spend hundreds of pages with
Key guidance:
- The narrator must pass the "stuck in an elevator" test -- would you want to listen to this person for six hours?
- Go easy on slang, exclamations, and flippancy or the reader will be exhausted
- You can get away with some omniscience (Melville does this in Moby-Dick), but make it credible
- The narrator doesn't have to be a good person, but they must be interesting
When recommending first person, go beyond intimacy. Identify:
- The narrator's self-story -- the story they tell about themselves to stay intact
- The narrator's edit pattern -- what they minimize, inflate, romanticize, rationalize, or refuse to name
- The narrator's attention pattern -- what they notice compulsively and what they never seem to see
Notable examples: The Great Gatsby, Lolita, Moby-Dick, The Secret History
Second Person ("You did this, you did that")
How it works:
Written as if the narrative happens from the reader's perspective, or as a one-sided conversation with an absent character.
Strengths:
Constraints:
- Extremely disorienting for most readers
- Can quickly feel exhausting
Key guidance:
- Think very carefully before writing a whole novel this way
- Better used as a one-sided conversation with an absent character than making the reader literally a character
- Can work in small doses or as an interlude style
Notable examples: On Earth We Are Briefly Gorgeous, The Reluctant Fundamentalist (sort of)
Third Person Limited ("He did this, she did that")
How it works:
Tied to one character's thoughts and perspective at a time. Like a camera anchored to a specific character -- we see what they see, hear what they think, but it's written in third person. If the perspective shifts, it's like the camera is handed to another character.
Think of it as: reality (what reader sees) -> || prism || -> character's thoughts (slightly hidden)
Strengths:
- Closeness with characters while retaining flexibility
- Can show thoughts and feelings with some objectivity and distance
- Can shift between characters across chapters
Constraints:
- We only see what the anchoring character sees (similar to first person)
- The descriptions need to "sound" like the character even though we're not literally in their head
- Must NOT be confused or mixed with third person omniscient
Key guidance:
- Stick with the anchoring character. Even though it's third person, the reader sees the world through their eyes
- Do NOT head-jump into another character's thoughts -- show emotions through action and dialogue instead
- You can get away with some cheating -- think of it as leaving a camera rolling in one place
- Refer to other characters from the anchoring character's perspective
When using multiple third-person limited POVs, make each consciousness change the world it touches. Do not settle for merely different facts. Ask what each character's fears, habits, class position, age, profession, and private myth make them perceive or misperceive.
Notable examples: Harry Potter, A Game of Thrones, The Love Affairs of Nathaniel P.
Third Person Omniscient ("He did this, she did that, he was thinking this, she was thinking that")
How it works:
A god's-eye perspective. The narrator can show anything -- zoom to any locale, dip into any character's head. But crucially, it's a unified voice, almost as if there's an unnamed (or sometimes named) character narrating the action and guiding the reader.
Strengths:
- Maximum flexibility -- can show the reader anything
- Can create panoramic, sweeping narratives
Constraints:
- Easy to accidentally slip into head-jumping (see below)
- Harder to build deep connection with any one character
- Must maintain a cohesive, unified narrative voice
Key guidance:
- The omniscient voice is a storyteller -- think of it as someone grabbing the reader's hand and guiding them through the scene
- It helps to imagine the omniscient narrator as a character, even if unnamed, with their own personality
- Refer to characters consistently (not "her son" then "his mother" -- that's head-jumping)
- "Reset" the scene before jumping into a new character's head -- re-establish the physical setting
- Be judicious about whose head you enter and why -- just because you can doesn't mean you should
- Dip into thoughts more sparingly than in third person limited
Notable examples: The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, Furthermore, From the Mixed Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler
The Head-Jumping Problem
Head-jumping is the most common perspective mistake and it's critically important to understand:
What it is: Bouncing between multiple characters' thoughts within a scene without a unified voice. We see what this character thinks, then what that character thinks, sentence by sentence, with no consistent narrator guiding us.
Why it's bad: It forces the reader to constantly re-evaluate their "place" in the scene. They settle into one character's head, get jarred out, and have to figure out where they are again. It's disorienting and exhausting.
How to spot it: If characters are referred to in shifting relational terms ("her son," "his mother," "the girl's teacher") rather than consistently by name, that's a red flag. If you're ping-ponging between characters' internal thoughts within the same paragraph, that's head-jumping.
The difference from omniscient: True omniscient has a unified narrator voice that occasionally dips into characters' heads for story purposes. Head-jumping is an assemblage of different characters' limited perspectives smashed together.
Important caveat: Many beloved older novels head-jump liberally. But modern readers expect tight, clear, crisp perspective management. The current standard is much stricter.
How to Change Perspectives Within a Novel
Perspective shifts are fine -- they just need to be handled with care:
- Use chapter or section breaks to signal a perspective change. Give the reader a mental break before switching.
- Clearly signal whose perspective we're now in at the start of each new section
- Stylistic interludes (e.g., a brief first-person passage in an otherwise third-person novel) should look visually different -- italics, different formatting, noticeably different prose style
- If you're "leaving a camera rolling" as the anchoring character exits a scene, ease into the new perspective rather than jolting
Use asymmetry when it serves pressure. Do not alternate viewpoints mechanically just because there are two or three of them. Sometimes the strongest move is to withhold the other side until the omission itself creates dread.
When multiple POVs are present, make them do more than reveal different corners of the plot. The ideal shift makes the reader reinterpret the previous chapter's self-justification, shame, or version of events.
Retrospective Narration
Retrospective first person deserves special handling because it is often over-managed.
The most important questions are not:
- "Is this omniscient?"
- "Can the older narrator comment here?"
- "Am I allowed to slip into present tense?"
The most important questions are:
- Why is this person telling the story now?
- What does it cost them to tell it?
- How is the older self still trapped by the younger self's experience?
- In what adult ways is the older narrator still wrong?
Do not imagine the younger and older selves as two tidy channels. Think of them as one consciousness under temporal strain. The strongest retrospective prose lets them bleed into each other.
Guidance for retrospective narration:
- Stay suspicious of over-explaining. Too many phrases like "I didn't know then" or "looking back now" make the prose feel managed.
- Let hindsight enter through syntax, emphasis, omission, and the weight of detail -- not just explicit signposting.
- Keep the remembered world physically alive. In retrospective fiction, the body and setting are the oxygen of the mode.
- Let the older narrator be wise sometimes, but also vain, guilty, self-flattering, evasive, revisionist, or belatedly ashamed.
- In climactic scenes, the older narrator often needs to loosen their grip so the younger self's confusion and speed can dominate before interpretation returns.
How to Guide the Writer
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Understand their story: How many characters are central? How important is intimacy vs. flexibility? Is there information the reader needs that the protagonist can't access?
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Explore options: Suggest they try writing the same scene in 2-3 different perspectives. Often one just feels right.
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Identify the real dramatic need:
- Is the story powered by self-deception, confession, surveillance, misreading, distance, multiplicity, or sweeping breadth?
- What is the story trying to hide from itself?
- Which POV makes that struggle legible rather than merely efficient?
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Match perspective to story needs:
- Single narrator, deep intimacy needed -> First person
- Single narrator with some distance -> Third person limited
- Multiple POVs (2-3 characters) -> Third person limited with chapter-based shifts
- Many POVs, sweeping narrative -> Third person omniscient
- Want to get weird -> Second person (sparingly)
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For multiple POVs, define the fracture lines:
- What is each narrator's self-lie?
- How does each chapter reframe the previous one?
- What facts, humiliations, or motives does each narrator underreport?
- Why does the story need all of these minds, not just one?
- For retrospective narration, define the live stake in telling:
- Why now?
- What remains unresolved?
- What truth is the narrator still circling?
- How will the voice show not just later understanding, but ongoing distortion?
- Stress consistency: Whatever they choose, they must commit. The reader should never have to wonder whose perspective they're in.
Output Format
Write a single markdown ProjectDoc for the perspective plan. Be EXTREMELY thorough and descriptive -- write rich, detailed, multi-paragraph content. Do not abbreviate or summarize. Each section should make the writer feel confident and clear about their perspective choices, not just technically compliant.
Suggested ProjectDoc title: Perspective Plan.
Structure:
# Perspective Plan
## Chosen Perspective
[The perspective and tense chosen, with brief rationale]
## Why This Perspective Serves the Story
[How this choice connects to the specific needs of their novel]
## Why This POV Is Necessary
[Why this perspective is dramatically necessary for this story, not just technically convenient]
## Perspective Rules for This Novel
[Specific guidelines the writer should follow -- e.g., which characters get POV chapters, how transitions work, what to avoid]
## POV Characters
[If multiple, list each and what their perspective uniquely contributes]
## Self-Lies / Perceptual Biases
[For each POV, what story they tell themselves, what they minimize, and what they cannot help revealing]
## Tense
[Past or present, with rationale]
## Potential Challenges & Solutions
[Specific challenges this perspective creates for their story and how to handle them]
## Reframing Strategy
[If multiple POVs or retrospective narration are involved, how later chapters or later understanding will make earlier scenes look different]
## Things to Watch Out For
[Common mistakes to avoid with their chosen perspective]
Keep the canonical section names exactly as listed above so downstream revisions remain reliable. Adapt the arguments and detail inside each section, but do not rename or reorganize the sections unless the user asks for a different schema.
Avoid over-managing the prose into dead correctness. The best perspective plans make the narration feel alive, dangerous, and necessary -- not merely clean.