Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
To fake it is to stand guard over emptiness.
Understanding POV is essential, or ought to be.
Vesco was always on the trail in search of money.
The universal narrator knows all and can enter a character's head any time he chooses.
But if two's company, three's a crowd - and that demands the omniscient point of view.
But whatever the POV, and the difficulty of forcing the action into a particular frame, stay within it.
The main advantage of the omniscient approach is that it's the easiest to handle. That's the major reason so many writers select it.
It's also possible to have two third person singular points of view, as represented by two characters through whose eyes the story is told in alternating chapters, say.