Sep 20, 2011

Nancy Kilpatrick - Author Interview: Narrative Style

Which narrative point of view (first person, second person or third person) do you use most in your fiction, or do you often use different points of view for different stories, and why?

I use different points of view. Usually the story screams for a particular POV. Most stories are 3rd person, single character POV and I suppose most of my short fiction is in that POV. But I've written a lot of first and also second person, as well as third with multi-characters. I have discovered that sometimes switching a POV will enliven a story that feels a tad dull.

Do you use present tense or past tense most in your fiction, or do you often switch tense for different stories, and why?

Most of my writing is past tense but I've written several short stories in present tense, and one in future tense.

Pick one of your published stories. What combination of point of view and tense did you use for this story, and why?

I have a series of novels called Power of the Blood. This is a vampire world with unusual vampires. The four volumes have different perspectives, depending on what I was trying to do. Child of the Night is from the POV of Carol only, in the 3rd person. It's crucial to keep this to only her POV because the other main character Andre has a secret which cannot be revealed until almost the end of the book. Near Death is a 2 character POV in 3rd. This story called for that because of how the characters Zero and David interact. Reborn is 2 character POV in 3rd but one of the characters, Karl, is dominant. The other, the half breed boy Michel, only has the stage at the start and in two chapters towards the end. The reader needs to know things the dominant character can't be present for. The 4th book Bloodlover is a 2 character POV in the third but was originally written in multi-character in the 3rd. I revised this book quite a bit and decided that having the two main characters, Julien and Jeanette, only made more sense; the other characters didn't appear beyond their usefulness so giving them a POV set the reader up for an intimacy that didn't follow through.
An independent novel of mine, Eternal City, is a multi character POV in the 3rd. The setting is very fixed in this novel which allows the characters to all have their say, and there are many.

To what extent is the vocabulary and manner of speech of the narration in this story different from your own everyday expression, and what does this contribute to the story?

The characters all have personalities, especially in the novel series, and I wanted to keep each distinct so that even if I didn't add a dialogue tag, the reader would know who was speaking or thinking. I don't speak like any of the characters in any of my novels or short stories and yet they come from me so there are fragments that seep into the story which are undoubtedly me, more or less, depending.

Did you tell this story with one narrator or multiple narrators, and why?

Eternal City is multi character POV. The reason is that there needs to be many perspectives on the setting which is like a character. The setting is a domed gated city on an island in a large lake. The perspectives are from the locals, from the authorities (the law), the summer residents, their children who play a pivotal role in the outcome, and from the man who runs this city, and others. All are focused on this one place and that allows for a multi narration.

Did you make the narrator of this story a character involved in the main action of the story, or did you make the narrator one which is not a charcater in your fictional storyworld, and why?

All of the characters are involved in the story and make the story work.

What is one of your favourite fictional stories, in which you think is narration is written well, and how would you describe what makes the narration work so well for you as a reader?

I suspect most writers would say, as I will, that all the narrations are well written in all the stories. There is no particular one that stands out. I can give an example, but it could be any number of stories, but this one happens to be the anthology my eyes fell on as I scanned the shelves with anthologies I've been in--Xanada 3, edited by Jane Yolan. The story is "Your Basic Unsung Hero". The narrator is the Death character we meet when we die and he/she/it is coming onstage to give us some crucial info about the afterlife. It's a light and breezy narration, meant to be humorous, with some important information imbedded in what the character says. I think the nature of Death and the mystery of the afterlife, if you believe in such, requires a certain delicacy in writing so that what the writer (in this case me) wants to get across can happen and is palatable for the reader.

Do you usually provide direct access to the thoughts of characters in your stories? If so, do you usually provide access to the thoughts of one character or multiple characters in a single story or point of view, and why?

I don't 'usually' do anything. In Eternal City, there is direct access to the thoughts of all the characters because the novel is 3rd person and direct thoughts are a way to get close to the characters and feel intimate without the forced intimacy of 1st person.

To what extent does the narrative style of novels you read have an impact on why you read them, and why?

I'd say that everything I've ever read has had an indirect impact on my writing. Reading, for a writer, is learning. Other writers do things that bring a kind of Ah Ha! moment, and then we realize that we, too, can do that. I've discovered a few things reading the work of others. Of course, every writer translates to their own style and the material they want to write about. As they say, there are only 36 plots and you can find them all in Shakespeare. Nothing is new and nobody is inventing anything. But we all shift around what exists and tell it in our way and that's what makes it unique. And some writers really do awaken other writers. For instance, Perfume, by Patrick Susskind. That novel uses the olfactory nerve for narration and it was an eye-opener for me and blew me away. That has integrated into my writing because I think about using the sense of smell whereas before I read Perfume (many years ago), it didn't really occur to me.

Author website: http://www.nancykilpatrick.com

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