







Artesian wrote:Okay, all ye' writers, I've got a problem. I'm writing a first-person, present tense novel, but I need to write a bit of it from the perspective of someone else, telling my character. Thing is, having him sit across the table from my character and just relate it in a conversation feels... dry. Can anyone think of some other way I could tell his story from the perspective of my main character?
Thanks.




Artesian wrote:Okay, all ye' writers, I've got a problem. I'm writing a first-person, present tense novel, but I need to write a bit of it from the perspective of someone else, telling my character. Thing is, having him sit across the table from my character and just relate it in a conversation feels... dry. Can anyone think of some other way I could tell his story from the perspective of my main character?
Thanks.


an asian to the knee wrote:Artesian wrote:Okay, all ye' writers, I've got a problem. I'm writing a first-person, present tense novel, but I need to write a bit of it from the perspective of someone else, telling my character. Thing is, having him sit across the table from my character and just relate it in a conversation feels... dry. Can anyone think of some other way I could tell his story from the perspective of my main character?
Thanks.
depends on the character's personality. what're they like?








Artesian wrote:an asian to the knee wrote:Artesian wrote:Okay, all ye' writers, I've got a problem. I'm writing a first-person, present tense novel, but I need to write a bit of it from the perspective of someone else, telling my character. Thing is, having him sit across the table from my character and just relate it in a conversation feels... dry. Can anyone think of some other way I could tell his story from the perspective of my main character?
Thanks.
depends on the character's personality. what're they like?
Well, the character whose story has to be told isn't actually selected yet. It's what they do that is important, not who they are. Generally, though, competent, rough, honourable and old-friends with the main character.
@Fanged: Unfortunately, no. The whole thing, all fifty pages and counting of it, is in first person. I can't easily switch perspectives without a lot of rewrite. :-/










Click!
My senses were instantly on full alert. Click was never a good sound to hear when you're infiltrating a mad-scientist's lair. Click was the sound preceding swinging blades, disappearing floorboards or giant mousetraps setting in preparation for your unwary foot. I swallowed and drew my gun cautiously, scanning about me for the slightest hint of something odd.
Well, odd for a mad-scientist's lair. I've seen a few, you know, and they tend to fall into two categories: disorganized messes, and obsessive neatness. The disorganized messes usually have more accidental traps (rickety shelving units, paper avalanches, beakers of 'lemonade') than intentional ones. The obsessively neat lairs are simplistic to the point of creepiness. Some mad-scientists organize screws, and file everything in cabinets. They tend to have traps which, if you can spot the minute signs, are easy to avoid. The messes are far worse.
This one was a mess. It contained far too many things that whispered their pleas to be touched. Shiny bits of oddly gleaming metal. Large red buttons. Bits of wire vibrating in a glass box. Electrical arcs. To me, there are few things more beguiling than switches and buttons and pretty blinky lights.
Other heroes talk about this. They call it the Curious Cat syndrome. (Actually, they don't call it that. Heroes tend not to use grandiloquent words. They say things like, “S--t, don't touch that! What are you, mad?”) I've got the Curious Cat worse than most. Everyone says I should have been an engineer instead of a hero, but I was never one for regular nine-to-five jobs. Heroes work by the contract, and are paid by the job. Of course, it's almost impossible to get life insurance.








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