TadOverdon
Pornographer
- Joined
- Mar 30, 2021
- Posts
- 1,696
And then there's the epistolary novel, of which my personal favorite remains Dracula. First person with numerous points of view.
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This is a style I adopted quite awhile ago. I too believe that it's a natural and great way to write erotica. I stumbled upon this several years ago after reading a book on the "Close POV" style. IMO, it is the most intimate option for erotica. There are a few nay sayers on occasion — I just ignore them. For the most part readers have liked it — and a few have gotten lost at the POV changes. Also, I rarely use the "he said" or "she said" speech tag — IMO it pulls me away from the intimate immersion. I always run these stories through a 'beta-reader/ proof-reader" to make sure an average reader should be able to navigate the story. If the story involves more than two main characters, I'll use third omniscient which is also fun.Lately, I've been writing a lot of FP dual POV in stories like, That Little Spark and Just Roomies. Before I started writing on here, I only wrote in 3rd person. Writing Erotica, it seems natural to write in first. Mating Season I wrote in 3rd person, and the readers seemed to enjoy that, too.
Many scholars of the genre consider The Virginian by Owen Wister to be the first “official” western novel. Published in 1902, it tells the story of an unnamed narrator who arrives in Wyoming from “back east.” The Virginian’s name isn’t included in the story. And the first-person narrator never reveals his own name or what part he is playing in the unfolding story. Nor how he is present when only two people are in a scene.
It has the intimacy of first-person, as in what one person saw, but none of the involvement is usually associated with first-person. Nor does it sink into the, I did this; she did that trap we can fall into of beginning sentence after sentence with name or pronouns and thereby dulling the action that follows.
See, this is something I could never do. I wouldn't write fiction if I had to write myself as I am into it. I suppose the process is a little schizoid for me. The characters who are more like me than not and the characters who are loathsome are more or less equally relatable to me (or, sometimes, equally difficult to relate to).I place myself there as the main character.
Thanks for replying. Since posting this I've posted two stories in the first person and am at the editing/proofreading stage on my first story in the third person. Third-person storytelling is definitely more of a challenge for me, but this story wouldn't work in the first person. I'm looking forward to posting it and getting some critique.I tend to favor first-person. I don’t think that it reflects poor skill or inexperience. In the hands of a good writer, using first-person can elevate the work above what could be achieved with third-person. Some stories won’t work as well in first-person. It really depends on whether or not your viewpoint character is capable of handling all of the heavy-lifting of building the narrative.
You can play to the strengths of first-person, which are also its limitations. Everything filters through your narrator, so you can’t describe what they can’t sense. On the other hand, you get full access to that narrator’s inner world. In my ongoing series, Double Helix, I jump between viewpoint characters, but I try to give each character a unique voice that reflects their background and personality. You can’t do that with third-person.
In Lamia, I played with themes of consciousness in artificial intelligence. The viewpoint character thinks that his android servant is conscious, but he admits that he has no way to know for sure. He’s going by what his senses are telling him, but that might be wrong.
I've not counted mine up, but these days I'm just as likely to use first person as I am to use close third. Like you, I think the latter can be just as intimate as first person (intimacy being the primary reason so many people think first person is "better"), but without the limitations.It's interesting to read this thread for all its strong opinions about one POV or the other being better.
I think in general people should be more accepting.I think those who vehemently reject one pov over the other need to read more, and should stretch their writing legs more - at least try the pov they "don't like". I never understand the hard overs - they're just missing out on a lot of good writing.
Over the course of the afternoon, hundreds of people came through. Most of the neighborhood stopped by to pay their respects, and nearly all of Ollie's coworkers. More family members than she could count. She found herself repeating phrases like "I don't know how I'll get along without him," and "Ollie was my rock," very mechanically. Reflexively.
She was pretty sure these were things widows said. She must have heard them somewhere, on a TV show or something. Everyone seemed to accept her axioms at face value, which was good, because she had been having an increasingly hard time keeping her thoughts straight. Had anyone asked her a question that required more thought than a stock answer, she might have cracked. Twenty-six years of marriage. She'd been with him since she was twenty, more than half of her life, and any attempt to think about what came after Ollie was simply unfathomable.
I understand the complexities of writing in first and third person but am more interested in the types of stories that readers here tend to prefer. Has anyone noticed if lit readers prefer to hear a story told from the perspective of one of the characters or from a completely uninvolved narrator?
I have not published yet but am working on a series that will either fall in the group sex or loving wives category.
The best writing style depends on the story content and the category.I understand the complexities of writing in first and third person but am more interested in the types of stories that readers here tend to prefer. Has anyone noticed if lit readers prefer to hear a story told from the perspective of one of the characters or from a completely uninvolved narrator?
I have not published yet but am working on a series that will either fall in the group sex or loving wives category.
Your premise is hard for me to wrap my mind around: there is no one monolithic "Lit reader" who can reliably be said to prefer one over the other.I understand the complexities of writing in first and third person but am more interested in the types of stories that readers here tend to prefer. Has anyone noticed if lit readers prefer to hear a story told from the perspective of one of the characters or from a completely uninvolved narrator?
I have not published yet but am working on a series that will either fall in the group sex or loving wives category.
I understand the complexities of writing in first and third person but am more interested in the types of stories that readers here tend to prefer. Has anyone noticed if lit readers prefer to hear a story told from the perspective of one of the characters or from a completely uninvolved narrator?
I have not published yet but am working on a series that will either fall in the group sex or loving wives category.
My impression is that at Literotica there is a bias in favor of first person POV. It's not hard to see why. People come here for a brief erotic experience, and first person POV more easily lets them settle into the perspective of the POV character and enjoy an erotic experience in their shoes, so to speak.
Be careful about assuming that third person POV necessarily involves a "completely uninvolved narrator," because that's no so. If you write in a free indirect style where the third person narrative is told in a way that holds close to the perspective of the main character, then the effect achieved is very similar to first person POV, but with a little more flexibility (as Bramblethorn explains above). I think erotic readers probably do NOT want a "completely uninvolved narrator," but it's not necessary to have that with third person POV.