I've been trying to get my narrator down but its very hard. I'm trying to have a third person limited narrator where the reader will see things from the perspective of one character in a scene (I'm going to have a couple of POV characters).
Here's my problem: While writing the narration, it seems almost impossible to use the narrator the way I want. Instead, everything I write seems to be physical-only, like a movie. I find it hard to use narration to reveal what my POV character is thinking/feeling/etc.
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I guess the first question that comes to mind is...Do *you* know what your character is thinking and feeling? If not, it will be impossible to write it. Write it down, all of it. What she/he is thinking, feeling, desiring, and not in general terms but specific for the scene you are writing.
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This does seem like an odd question. But the truth is that it's a fairly common problem. The only way to get around it is to do as Christine suggests, ask yourself what the POV character thinks/feels about the situation. Do it often. If the POV character is going to do something, ask yourself why, and write down the answer.
Posts: 8322 | Registered: Aug 1999
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One thing to try (and it's a common trick when writing mysteries) is an interview with the narrator - sometimes conducting the interview through another character will help clarify their relationship.
But, I am wondering if maybe your real problem is that the character voice you've chosen to narrate the story doesn't want to.