Characters and Viewpoint by Orson Scott Card: Book Cover

    Characters and Viewpoint by Orson Scott Card

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    (Paperback)

    • Pub. Date: March 1999
    • 182pp
    • Sales Rank: 145,863
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      Product Details

      • Pub. Date: March 1999
      • Publisher: F+W Media, Inc.
      • Format: Paperback, 182pp
      • Sales Rank: 145,863

      Synopsis

      This guide provides practical, in-depth instruction on how fiction writers can make the best choices in creating characters and handling viewpoint. Writers will learn how to put original, yet realistic people in their stories, while choosing the viewpoint that best suits the characters and the storyline.

      Annotation

      Explains how to create, introduce, and develop vivid characters and reveal them through the different points of view available in long or short fiction.

      Biography

      With a raft of science fiction awards and a dedicated following, Orson Scott Card writes imaginative and compelling novels that also explore questions about morality and religion. His Ender series is the most popular; but he also offers a fresh take on the Bible in his Women of Genesis books and has authored other history-based fantasy series.

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      Customer Reviews

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      • Ratings: 3Reviews: 1

      datedby Anonymous

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      January 30, 2005: When this book came out, it was one of the few to go beyond the basics and to do it in a clear, useable way. Today, a number of books have gone beyond this book on the problem of characterization, so the book is dated. And since the book is very brief, it is not as in-depth as the title makes it appear. The discussion of point of view follows the all-too-familiar pattern of listing the possibilities and discussing each one. First person and third person are the two main categories, with omniscient, limited omniscient, and shifting as subheads. Only a few words about the advantages of each and these are the same found in most introductory books on fiction writing. You want to use the most effective point of view, so you?ll need to get another book to tell you which those are and to show you why. Still, if you?ve read only an introductory book on fiction writing, this might be a good next step.