Editing Scenes for Deep Point of View

Editing Scenes Deep POV

Use Scrivener’s Custom Metadata to help you while editing scenes for deep POV.

By: Grant P. Ferguson

Last Updated: November 20, 2024

Alfred Hitchcock once said,

The self-edit process leaves in the dramatic elements and removes the rest, enhancing the reading experience by connecting readers to the protagonist.

The dull bits include:

  • Author intrusions that spoil the scene by telling rather than showing how the story unfolds from a character’s point of view.
  • Revealing information the point-of-view character could not know.
  • Unnecessary backstory that clutters the scene.
  • The writer’s interjection of an opinion.
  • Overused techniques, such as flashbacks.
  • Excessive descriptions of research, characters, and settings.

Structure (Part 1D): Deep POV

To give readers a deeper experience, consider using Third-Person Limited, which is when an author sticks closely to one character but remains in third person. This style puts readers inside a character’s thoughts, feelings, and sensations, deepening the experience.

For authors writing in Third-Person Limited, a deep point-of-view edit explores several questions. For example:

  • Has the scene unfolded organically from the point-of-view character’s perspective?
  • Are there any author intrusions and opinions?
  • Does the scene connect readers to the character’s thoughts, emotions, and senses?
  • Are readers immersed in the character’s actions, sufferings, victories, and defeats?
Deepening Reader Connections
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Recommendations

For example, use Scrivener’s Custom Metadata to achieve Deep POV.

  • Make clear the point-of-view character at the outset of each scene.
  • Limit the point of view to one character’s thoughts and internal reactions for each scene.
  • Use the POV character’s senses and body language to show feelings and reactions.
  • Have the POV character reference self and other characters using realistic language.
  • Likewise, limit perceptions and descriptions of self and supporting cast to POV character’s five senses.

For more insights on story structure and self-editing, check out the Trellis Method.



9 responses to “Editing Scenes for Deep Point of View”

  1. D. Wallace Peach Avatar

    An excellent post, Grant. A deep POV makes all the difference for me as a reader. I lose interest quickly if I don’t feel intimately connected to a character. Thanks for the great checklist. 🙂

    1. Grant at Tame Your Book Avatar

      Thanks, Diana. A checklist can make all the difference when editing a scene for deep POV. Top authors turn that lowly checklist into the writer’s intuitive style through frequent use.

      1. D. Wallace Peach Avatar

        It’s amazing how much there is to learn about this craft.

        1. Grant at Tame Your Book Avatar

          It’s like 3D chess, only a lot more fun and rewarding.

  2. Jacqui Murray Avatar

    Great tips. That list–I am on the lookout for them when I find my story has bogged down. “Author intrusions”–those are insidious! “Revealing information the point-of-view character could not know”–those actually make me angry!

    1. Grant at Tame Your Book Avatar

      A writer’s righteous anger, Jacqui. The sign of an experienced novelist. Another of those: once you see it you can’t unsee it. Keeping track on a scene-by-scene basis adds to the page-turning frenzy of readers. I appreciate your insights!

  3. Priscilla Bettis Avatar

    I keep track of the different components of a novel by examining each scene as I write (treating the scene as a mini story with goal, motivation, and conflict), and then afterwards, when the novel’s first draft is done, editing from the big stuff to the tiny stuff with lots and lots of read-throughs.

    1. Grant at Tame Your Book Avatar

      Excellent, Priscilla. To some, you efforts may seem like extra work, but your attention to those details also stimulates creativity. Thanks for adding to the discussion!

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