Three Reasons To Stop Head-Hopping


When I started writing my very first novel, the novel which shall never-ever-not-ever see the light of day, I head-hopped between characters all the time, shifting point of view whenever and wherever I felt like it.

I know why I did it and there's no writing theory behind it.  I head-hopped because I enjoyed the experience. Part of the thrill of being a new writer was knowing what all the characters were thinking and doing and feeling. Writing multiple POV was such a rush.

Some very nice writing friends cleared their throats and looked concerned and said, "Well, you know, this isn't the way most books are written."  Others said, "Maybe you should learn to play by the rules before you break them."

I didn't listen.  Why?  Because head-hopping was a fun, wonderful experience. When I envisioned my novel, I saw everything!  I knew every character's backstory and POV. I knew what everyone did and thought at every point on the timeline. I fell in love with this big picture and wanted to share every bit of it with readers.  In this way, I became involved in transferring the idea of a world rather than telling a story. 

The result was a novel that never ended, full of engaging scenes with no purpose.  Beautiful imagery and symbolism rolled through worlds where everything happened---for no discernible reasons.

I've since learned that many first novels turn out looking a lot like mine.  I don't even feel foolish about it.  Perhaps first novels should be a clearing of the pipes. Random analogies and purple prose burst forth alongside archetypes and dreamy visions and authorial baggage.

Too often new writers are given advice based on convention: "That's not how narratives are generally written."  Or sometimes: "A POV like yours isn't going to sell."

Artistic souls don't often respond well to admonitions based on conformity. Many are still working proudly on their Being-Different merit badges (often called "exploring voice"). Since I'm in favor of individual choices and I don't find conformity all that appealing myself, I give head-hoppers three reasons to consider limiting POV:

Providing a Place of Rest for Your Reader

When you choose POV, you're giving your reader a place to rest.  You're pulling up a chair, asking the reader to settle in and enjoy the delicious words you're serving.

If you tell the story from one character's POV, the reader stays at the same table throughout the entire literary meal.

If you tell the story from two characters' POVs, you're asking the reader to get up and change seating every so often, shifting between two tables, maybe every time you shift to a new chapter. This can be fun and enlightening and shake things up a bit.

If you tell the story from three characters' POVs, you're requiring more shifting around. Readers may start to feel burdened by switching to a new table between every course.

If you shift POV three or four times within a scene, the reader barely gets settled, lifts a bite of words to her brain, and it's time to move move move move move.  "But I didn't even get a taste of that last thought!" Too bad. Move.

So this is a first reason not to head-hop.  It can be rude. You set up your delicious feast, ask readers to listen, and then you keep moving them all over the place just when they get settled.

You do have another option, of course. You can keep all the POV shifts as long as you sit, godlike, over your story. Offer the reader a place at your fire. Together you stare into the flames and see the characters a long way off.  But, if you do this, it becomes reason number two not to head hop:

Distancing from Characters

If readers are buckled up next to one protagonist for the entire story, they'll feel everything that character feels as if they are that person.

If readers are sitting with the godlike narrator, considering the characters of a far-away world, they may sympathize with those characters and care deeply about what happens, but they won't feel the characters' story as if they're living it.  They'll identify with the narrator rather than the characters.  If the narrator cares deeply that the characters aren't burned at the stake, readers will feel the narrator's anxiety, but they won't feel the flames at their feet.

Mystery

You're not required to tell your reader everything you know.  It's okay to flirt, to withhold information, to tempt your reader from one page to the next with promises of delights barely imagined.

Your characters are allowed to do the same thing.  In fact, sometimes the best thing you can do for a character is eliminate his point of view.  The cowboy with the jagged scar across his cheek may be more appealing if we're not inside his head dealing with post-traumatic stress.  The old woman who walks her dogs by the protagonist's house every day--the one who claims to be a spy?  She may be a better character if we think she's lying and then find out she's not. Go into her head and there's no mystery to uncover.

It's a matter of control.  I'm still not saying a writer should never head hop.  Eliminate all head hopping and I'd lose some of my favorite authors. I have found, however, that restricting POV often provides more freedom to tell my story rather than less.

It's much easier to get readers to suspend disbelief when they know their place in the narrative and identify closely with the protagonist. That means I can reach farther with my plot.

It's much easier to keep readers intrigued if I play on the mystery inherent in a single character's POV. That means some pacing issues evaporate.

Knowing all the details of our worlds isn't enough for novel creation. We have to tell the stories.  Limiting POV is one of the tools we can use to make our worlds come into focus in a way that leaves our readers wanting more.

Comments

  1. "The result was a novel that never ended, full of engaging scenes with no purpose. Beautiful imagery and symbolism rolled through worlds where everything happened—for no discernible reasons."
    ROTFLMAO I think we might have written the exact same first novel.

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  2. Great explanation of why this POV is so critical.

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  3. Johanna,

    Love your "feast" analogy. Great points and great writing. Thanks.

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  4. Perhaps first novels should be a clearing of the pipes.

    I love this point and couldn't agree more!

    But an as ex-head hopping addict, I really like your idea of giving the reader a place to rest. Thanks for the great reasoning and explanation!

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  5. Johanna, you've given me one of my favorite all time sentences "Artistic souls don’t often respond well to admonitions based on conformity." I love the structure and flow as much as the message. Another excellent post!

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  6. "Clearing the pipes," hmm? That's a pretty accurate characterization of it from my point of view as well. Sometimes I think I'm clearing the pipes every time I begin a novel or story. Luckily, experience has taught me to settle POV issues and return to edit the pipe-clearing with a machete. You've made good cases for learning how POV can impact a story for the reader. Thank you for this, Johanna.

    Take care,
    JC

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  7. Clarissa SouthwickJuly 6, 2011 at 5:50 AM

    Johanna, I LOVE the photo. You always have the best pictures, and what a great way to fix the topic in our minds. Thanks for the advice on controlling POV. It's harder than it looks. I usually struggle with not going deep enough into POV. It's something I'm working on and I will forever have your mask picture in my head when I think about it :) Meanwhile, I'm still working on that merit badge. :)

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  8. Johanna, I also loved the place to rest example. I sounds so easy. I'll write a book. It's only after you have experience you realize how huge the task is.

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  9. So many of us wrote that book! It was a bring-your-own-plot kind of thing.

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  10. Thank you, Jen! And thanks for your comments and links on Twitter too.

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  11. ::smiling and blushing:: Thank you, Liz!

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  12. I know your writing, JC! Hold back with that machete!

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  13. Yes! It's so difficult to control these things within a novel. I'm so thankful for revisions. :)

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  14. Exactly right, Lynn. All those control issues seem easier until we dive into the writing.

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  15. Many thanks for the reassuring news that I am not the first to wander into POV Purgatory. I'm determined to find my way out. I could say I'm in two minds about how to resolve the issue, but in actual fact I'm in about six minds (!), and therein lies the problem...

    That "distancing from characters" point has really grabbed my attention. I seriously don't want to do that, so thanks for the warning, and the food for thought.

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  16. I think I had a problem with only giving one POV on my first manuscript. And boy was she a paper doll! I like what you said about keeping a little mystery in the story.

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  17. [...] blog post was first published on the Gem State Writers blog on July 6, [...]

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