Do You Head-Hop? Getting Third Person Point of View Right
Image from Flickr by Andrew Morrell Photography
Ā One common mistake that fiction-writers make with point of view is head-hoppingĀ while writing in the limited third person.
In case that sounded like gobbledygook, letās get some definitions pinned down:
Third Person ā using he or she (āIā is the first person)
Point of view (āPOVā) ā the perspective from which youāre writing
Itās easy to understand point of view when you have a first person (āIā) story ā but it can be trickier to get your head around it in a third person one.
There are two key types of third person narration, omniscient and limited, and Iām going to go through each before I give you an example of head-hopping.
Third Person Omniscient
Some novels have an āomniscientā narrator ā one who knows all about the characters and can dip in and out of their thoughts as needed. In these cases, head-hopping isnāt just okay ā itās an essential part of the perspective.
A good example is J.K. Rowlingās The Casual Vacancy, which does this for some (though not all) of the chapters.
These two sections come from within a page of one another, and show Milesā thoughts, followed by Samanthaās:
āBrace yourself,ā said Miles Mollison, standing in the kitchen of one of the big houses in Church Row.
He had waited until half-past six in the morning to make the call. It had been a bad night, full of long stretches of wakefulness punctuated by snatches of restless sleep. At four in the morning, he had realized that his wife was awake too, and they had talked quietly for a while in the darkness.
[…]āSam and I went in the ambulance,ā Miles enunciated clearly. āWith Mary and the body.ā
Samantha noticed how Milesā second version emphasized what you might call the more commercial aspect of the story. Samantha did not blame him.
Elsewhere, the omniscient perspective shifts to give us a view thatās not attached to any character:
The announcement of Barryās death on the Parish Council website sank with barely a ripple, a tiny pebble into the teeming ocean. All the same, the telephone lines in Pagford were busier than usual this Monday, and little knots of pedestrians kept congregating on the narrow pavements to check, in shocked tones, the exactness of their information.
This type of narration ā dipping in and out of different characterās thoughts as well as giving a broader perspective ā can work well, but it can also make it difficult for readers to immediately identify with your characters.
Using the omniscient narrator can come across as a little old-fashioned, and itās best handled with care. However, if you do want to show multiple charactersā thoughts within one scene, you need this omniscient style.
Third Person Limited
Many modern novels are written in the third person limited perspective.
This means writing in the third person but sticking with one character at a time. Imagine that youāve got a character positioned behind that character: youāre showing the reader what they see, not what someone across the room is seeing.
Hereās an example, from The Snow Child by Eowyn Ivey:
Afternoon descended into dusk, and Mabel left the window to light an oil lamp on the table, as if she was going to prepare dinner and wait for Jackās return, as if this day would end like any other, but in her mind she was already following the trail through the woods to the Wolverine River. The lamp burned as she laced her leather boots, put her winter coat on over her housedress, and stepped outside. Her hands and head were bare to the wind.
Third person limited works well because it encourages the reader to identify with the character quickly. It also allows you a fair bit of flexibility as author. You can still switch to another viewpoint … if you do it right.
Head-Hopping in Action
Hereās a bit of my novel, Lycopolis, rewritten slightly so you can see what third person limited head-hopping looks like:
In the dim light, Sethās pupils were so large that only a faint rim of blue iris was left around them. For the first time, Kay noticed the grey shadows beneath his eyes. Earlier, sheād almost convinced herself that Hannah was right, the medallion was just a coincidence ā but then there were the bruises. And the nightmares.
āHeās not fine,ā she said, āAnd youāre not either, are you?ā
He wasnāt expecting that. āOf course I am,ā he said, and smiled. He tightened his grip on her arm; sheād back down.
āLet go of me,ā she said.
He let go and raised his eyebrows, hoping the implication was clear: youāre over-reacting. āTake it easy.ā
In the first paragraph here, we have Kayās perspective. Sheās looking at Seth, and thinking.
Suddenly, though, weāre into Sethās head with āHe wasnāt expecting thatā ā and the rest of the passage carries on from his perspective, showing what heās thinking.
Hereās how the actual text goes, staying in Kayās head:
He blinked, and for just a moment, she saw a flash of surprise, perhaps even fear. āOf course I am.ā An easy smile curved his lips. His grip tightened on her arm.
āLet go of me,ā she said.
He did, raising his eyebrows. āTake it easy.ā
Why Headhopping is a Bad Idea
Abrupt changes in point of view jar the reader. Some readers wonāt be able to put their finger on whatās changed, but it will bother them.
If you switch viewpoint once in a scene, thatās OK. If youāre changing it around every paragraph or two, though ā and you donāt have an omniscient narrator like Rowling ā the changes will get choppy and confusing.
It can be tempting to jump between different characterās heads: it gives you the chance to show what someoneās thinking, not just what theyāre doing. But you can give an indication of that through another characterās observations, if you need to, and stay with third person limited.
For you as a writer, working in one point of view at a time may help you get into your story. It can present challenges (āhow do I show that A is lying when the scene is from Bās point of view?ā) but it can also make things more interesting for the reader, by allowing them to infer a characterās motivations.
When You Can Switch Points of View
Of course, you donāt have to stick with a single point of view for a whole novel, or even a whole short story ā and you donāt need to use an omniscient narrator either. You might switch:
At the End of a Chapter
This is the safest option! In Lycopolis, I use seven different charactersā POVs, and switch to a new character each time a chapter ends.
Some authors use the characterās name at the start of their chapters when they do this. (Take a look at George R.R. Martinās Game of Thrones for an example of this.)
At the End of a Scene
You might want to have multiple scenes and viewpoints per chapter. If so, you can switch at the end of a scene: the scene break is usually indicated with a blank line or with three asterisks. This is pretty much the same as switching at the end of a chapter, only youāre unlikely to head the scene with a characterās name.
During a Scene (Carefully)
Of course, writing rules are there to be broken, and you can switch viewpoints during a scene, even in third person limited. If youāre going to do so, though, Iād usually recommend keeping the number of switches to a minimum.
Alternatively, you could have a āspecialā type of scene (perhaps a prologue or interlude) where you write from an omniscient perspective and give us a birds-eye view of your novelās world, delving into charactersā thoughts when needed.
Whatās Your Point of View?
Iād love to hear what you think.
When youāre writing (or reading a story) in the third person, do you prefer the omniscient or limited perspective?
Have you got any good examples of head-hopping, or other third-person limited perspective problems?
Just pop a comment below.
About
Iām Ali Luke, and I live in Leeds in the UK with my husband and two children.
Aliventures is where I help you master the art, craft and business of writing.
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Can You Call Yourself a āWriterā if Youāre Not Currently Writing?Ā
The Three Stages of Editing (and Nine Handy Do-it-Yourself Tips)
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I usually write from a third person limited perspective, but omniscient can be beautiful when done right. My favorite example is Michael Ondaatje’s The English Patient, and I’m itching to try a project from this point of view! I think if the main character has a very quirky unusual voice it can be great to have first person point of view, but as a reader I like third person better. I see a lot of writers now are using first person point of view and getting different perspectives by switching characters in each chapter. I think that’s great if it’s the best point of view for the book (like in Swamplandia), but I don’t think it should be the default point of view because it’s easier to write.
I agree with you on first person, Elizabeth — I’ve loved some first person books with unusual narrative voices (Emma Donoghue’s The Room and Jane Harris’ The Observations come to mind), but in general, I prefer third person.
Good point on not just picking the easiest perspective to write — and sometimes it might be worth experimenting with perspectives early on, to see what suits the story best.
Informative and interesting. But unfortunately I have almost zero interest in fiction, despite having read fiction for 20-odd years. I think the last time I wrote any sort of fiction was in year 9 at school! O_o
Gemma W.’s last blog post ..A healthy perception and gratitude are not mutually exclusive
Gemma, glad you found it an interesting read, at least! Fiction-writing certainly isn’t for everyone — and it looks like you’re blogging, so I hope that’s a good creative outlet for you.
I like to think that I write in omniscient (I prefer this because I love getting in to each character’s heads – to me it draws the readers in more), but now I fear that I’m in fact writing limited with some head-hopping. >_<
I think I might need some more clarification. How does one know if they're writing in omniscient, or if they're ATTEMPTING omniscient but falling flat with limited head-hopping????
LycoRogue’s last blog post ..Mini-Post
I struggled with this a bit when writing the post!
I think — though maybe this is a matter for a Huddle discussion or something — that true omniscient narration means that you’re moving constantly between different people’s thoughts, with some sentences / paragraphs that aren’t from any perspective (like the J.K. Rowling segment starting “The announcement of Barryās death…”)
If you’re generally following one character — say, for 50% of a chapter — and then suddenly switch to another for two lines, that’s head-hopping.
I’m open to other thoughts on this, though; I really like third person limited and it’s a good while since I’ve even attempted writing anything from a more omniscient perspective.
Hi Ali,
This is a great summation of what ‘head-hopping’ really is. I struggled with this and actually parted ways with an editor over a difference of opinion on expressing point of view.
Unless the novel is being written in 1st person, I don’t see how it’s possible not to change POVs as what the different characters are thinking, saying, and doing are all expressions of their various POVs. That’s a vital part of storytelling.
Like you suggested, I found the easiest way to clearly show (not tell š a POV change was to use the line break and * * *. It’s subliminal, yet so clear that there’s a change in direction and you can use it many times within a chapter without it being irritating.
Thanks, Garry! Glad you found a solution that works for you. š I think subtle cues are great, and I’m sure most readers don’t constantly think “Oh look, a scene break, now there’s a new point of view,” they just get on with it! But that little marker helps them make the transition.
THANK YOU for writing this post, Ali! It bugs the heck out of me when I’m reading and the author doesn’t get this right. I think that third person omniscient is really hard to pull off – you have to make sure you’re switching through character’s heads in each scene, you can’t focus in on one. I love third person limited since you really get to know one character per scene or chapter.
Jessica Flory’s last blog post ..3 Surprising Story Killers ā and How to Avoid Them
Thanks, Jessica! I’m glad I’m not the only one this bugs… š
I’ve never even had much of a go at omniscient, because I think it must be really tough to get right. I think you’ve absolutely hit it there — the author needs to continually switch rather than suddenly focus on one character for a whole scene.
love this! This is a great post on head-hopping! It can be so confusing when you have to go back and read a passage to figure out what happened.
I’ve been struggling with this a bit — not the head hopping bit, but what POV to use. I am writing in third person limited, but only with one character. As I’ve been writing I wonder if I ought to add another character to my POV. It’s either that or first person and I don’t know if I want to go there. Is it bad to have third person but limited to just one character?
Rochelle’s last blog post ..How to Take Charge of Your Self-Doubt Part 2
I don’t think it’s bad, but you’re potentially missing out on some of the advantages of third person — being able to show your main character through someone else’s eyes, and being able to give the reader information that the main character doesn’t know.
Is there a particular reason you’ve chosen not to use first person? (Some authors simply prefer third, and some readers — I’m one of them — so that’s a perfectly good reason, in my opinion!)
I want to say I’m not a fan of first person, but I keep finding out that books I love are first person and I just didn’t realize it. I think that is a sign of it being done well. When it’s not done well it’s an ack!-I-can’t-read-that reaction. As I’ve been writing I have to fight myself to keep it in third person and I just plow through because I’m worried about it. I prefer third person, but at the same time I think this would work as a first person. It’s a paranormal mystery — time traveling involved. I need to sit down and have a good talk with myself about this. I could either add a character’s head to my third person or make it first person. Sorry, I didn’t intend to take my comments off-topic!
Rochelle’s last blog post ..Stage Makeup 101
No need to apologise, it’s nice when a topic gets extended in the comments! And good luck with the novel (I’m assuming novel rather than short story?) whichever way you take it. š
Thanks for this post Ali. Your observations and examples are quite good. You raise some interesting technical issues about writing, storytelling and POV, and a twee bit Oxford English too. I salute you.
Perhaps I assume my readers have a little bit more of an elastic brain that you do. I’m a head-jumper to advance the story ASAP. However that’s after a few paragraphs of background and foreplay per character. I think more than a page of such is indulgent. So I spice them again when their POV comes round again. Instead of telling you all their background bio and detailed thought processes, self-doubts, etc. I try for action that shows it. But then, what do I know?
I rely on a note from a best-selling author who threw the rules out the window and said: Just tell a good story. If my latest, GOAT-RIPPER, doesn’t work, at least I have the cheese to show for it. We ate the cheese — it works. On’Ya.
Thanks, Peter. I’m sure many readers are indeed a bit more flexible on this than I am! I certainly agree with you on showing character background etc. through action rather than long sections of narrative.
Good luck with your novel!
I’ve had to reedit a book because of the head hopping. Written in the third person I initially felt the other main character was too shallow given the depth of my main POV character. This lead me to head hop somewhat. It has been challenging keeping to one POV and giving another character depth. I hope I’ve achieved it and that the head hoping that has taken place is minimal and acceptable. This is not something I ever thought about before and understand how crucial it actually is in keeping the story flowing.
Thank you for the example of head hopping, and then the corrected text that eliminated hopping heads.
Ali,
Thanks, this is really well done.
However I find it a little depressing. I wrote most of my (middle grade Fantasy) novel head-hopping between the two main characters because the book is told from THEIR perspective. They are sisters who are together for basically the entire book and they meet everyone and do everything together. But now as I attempt some rewriting, it’s really starting to bother me. This is going to be very difficult to get right. I really want the reader to identify with “THE GIRLS,” not with one or the other.
Any thoughts on how to approach this? I’m trying to remember any other book that might have used a similar technique or if it’s just bad form. Didn’t “The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe” swap between Edmund, Lucy, Peter and Susan’s thoughts? Or perhaps it was just omniscient narrative.
Thanks,
Jeremy
Follow-up: I just found this elsewhere and it seems like maybe it’s not such bad form to do graceful head-hopping between two primary characters:
“The term head-hopping specifically refers to non-delineated changes of POV (written from within the head of a character) within a scene that move quickly between characters (ie one sentence or a short paragraph, then back again or to another character), especially if itās between more than two characters, or uses the POV of minor characters who have limited POV throughout the rest of the story.
“Valid changes of POV are limited to main characters and are clearly delineated with a smooth baton change.”
Source: http://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/1317406-head-hopping
It’s fine to change POV between main characters — the key is to do it consciously and deliberately, and not jump back and forth constantly.
The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe has an omniscient viewpoint (which in this case features an author/narrator who occasionally talks directly to the reader), which is why C.S. Lewis can do things like this:
“At the name of Aslan each one of the children felt something jump in its inside. Edmund felt a sensation of mysterious horror. Peter felt suddenly brave and adventurous. Susan felt as if some delicious smell or some delightful strain of music had just floated by her. And Lucy got the feeling you have when you wake up in the morning and realize that it is the beginning of the holidays or the beginning of summer.”
In terms of specific (if fairly prosaic) advice — can you switch between the girls with each chapter / scene change?
Thanks Alli, that’s good info. I actually rewrote the first four or five chapters to do just what you said: switch between the girls every chapter. In the first chapter I actually switch midway through with a scene change. From chapter six on, the switching is done more randomly. But I’m pretty comfortable with the way it works now. From a reader’s perspective, I think they will quickly, but comfortably, get used to the idea of seeing things from each of the sisters’ perspectives, and will not likely notice when the further meshing of viewpoints occurs later in the book. So far none of my test readers has said that it was a problem for them.
Reader feedback is always the best test! Glad you found a solution that worked for you, the book and the readers. š
Ali,
Let me see if I understand correctly. If I have a scene where a man and woman are seated at dinner (first date) and, along with their dialogue I have inner dialogue where she is assessing him and in the next paragraph, he is assessing her, Iām āhead hoppingā and thatās taboo? I truly believe it adds to the scene for the reader to have both of their perspectives. How would this be handled without head hopping? Iām writing third person omniscient. Thanks!
If you’re writing third person omniscient, then that’s fine. It’s your story, and if you feel both perspectives are truly necessarily in the same scene, then go for it! The problem comes when authors are writing from a more limited perspective and slip occasionally, rather than having a balanced approach.
After several months of off-and-on reading, I’m about three quarters of the way through Charles Dickens’ Bleak House and find it to be a very interesting example of mixed POV. I thought it might make a nice addition to your post here.
Dickens uses first person narrative for about half the chapters. The narrator is Miss Esther Summerson, essentially the primary character of the novel. The other half of the chapters are told by a third person omniscient narrator who switches liberally between settings and characters with each new chapter. The styles are intermixed with typically one or two chapters from Esther’s point of view, followed by one or two chapters with the omniscient narrative.
What makes this novel even more unique is that not only is there a dramatic POV switch between chapters, there is also a tense switch. The Esther Summerson first-person narrative is all done in traditional past tense, as Esther tells the story of her time at Bleak House. However, every chapter told with the omniscient narrative is done in the present tense.
It’s a fascinating technique that surely achieves what Dickens wanted: to tell a traditional Austen-esque story of love and loss, but to mix in his own commentary on Dickensian England’s social inequities and judicial insensibilities, and to do it in such a manner that the difference between the two would be impossible not to notice.
The novel’s length makes it a tedious read, but I’ve found it very illuminating from a craft perspective. And it boggles the mind to think he wrote, re-wrote, and edited all 900 pages using quill and ink!!!
If you do decide to read Bleak House, I’d recommend watching the 8-part BBC mini-series starring Gillian Anderson and Carey Mulligan–makes it a bit easier to remember the sixty-one characters.
It’s rather a long time since I read Bleak House (raced through it one Christmas break while at uni — I had to write an essay!) — so thanks very much for the great comment, Jeremy! I may have to dig out my copy…
Interesting post. Omniscient is regarded as old fashioned by some, but it’s a staple of comic and satirical writing.
Mark Hoult’s last blog post ..The brutal truth about writing
Good point — I have to confess I don’t read much comic or satirical writing!
Thank you for this discussion – I am finding it quite helpful in wrapping my head around POV. I am a lifelong writer, but am working on my first novel. I have decided to use third person limited, using character names within each chapter title for clarity. I have played with other formats and they just don’t seem to fit.
Meanwhile, I am wondering about the best way to weave in scene/setting/world building details (aside from a prologue, which I may do as well). Is it workable to have one omniscient-like narrator who sits separately from each character? For example, within a chapter in which two characters are talking, one of whom we get to see some feelings/motivations, does it work to have a separate narration that describes the scene and some of the characters’ backgrounds in such a way that it is just commentary? Here is a sample sentence: The platform is a gigantic flat crystal that looks as if it is effortlessly suspended in space. For this sentence to fit, is the reader’s assumption that this is the character’s viewpoint, or is it a separate narrator’s comment? – That said it could be: Chris thinks the platform, a gigantic flat crystal, looks as if it is effortlessly suspended in space.
Thank you in advance for your assistance.
Britton Swingler’s last blog post ..Abrupt
While it’s important for a writer to understand POV rights and wrongs, I think it’s also important to not overthink it. I see no reason why this sentence:
“The platform is a gigantic flat crystal that looks as if it is effortlessly suspended in space.”
would be out of place regardless of voice. If I were talking/thinking in the first person, I could say/think that exact sentence. And it’s equally appropriate to express Jack’s point of view.
The only distinguishing factor about the sentence is that it’s in present tense, so would be out of place in a traditional past tense narrative.
Good question, Britton. I agree with Jeremy that a fairly neutral sentence like that could fit in most voices just fine. If I read that, I’d assume it was the viewpoint character’s perspective. (As Jeremy rightly notes, you’ll need to make sure you’re sticking with present tense throughout, or change it to past tense.)
You might run into problems if you’re describing something that’s perfectly obvious to the character but not to the reader. E.g. if these platforms are totally normal to this character, as normal as a door or a table would be to us, then it might be more appropriate to describe it as something as simple as “the platform” or “the crystal platform”.
I’d be wary about sketching in background details that the viewpoint character wouldn’t know, though. Readers can pick up a lot from the way characters behave, the way they talk, and so on. In terms of the world, again, readers will pick up a lot of this without having long explanations in the narrative — you can get away with quite a light touch.
Best of luck! If you’re feeling unsure, don’t let it stop you, just plow on forward — it’s often easier to fix little niggles with viewpoint in the second draft, especially if you can get a few writer friends to give you some feedback.
I detest any closeness between reader and characters; whence omniscient is my one true way to go, ideally with a narrator addressing the readers rhetorically as in the good old times of literature.
HI Ali
Thank you for this article, it’s something I’ve been struggling with a little. I’m in the process of finishing off my first manuscript for a YA series. After getting an assessment, it was pointed out I was head-hopping. Taking a step back, I realised this was absolutely true! I wanted to remain in the third person, and still felt it necessary to have a few POV within the book – especially with some crucial scenes where the main protagonist wasn’t present – so I rewrote to ensure every chapter has one POV (and their are only 4 POV in the entire novel, mainly from one character). Much the same as the Gossip Girl series, which I believe is a great fast-paced, snappy YA read. Would you still call this approach omniscient or limited? Thanks!
I’d call this limited (maybe “multiple third-person limited”). Like you, I tend to write with several POVs, and some characters get a lot more viewpoint chapters than others. Well done you for rewriting the lot, too — I think it’s so tempting to give up at that point!
I write from a third person Omniscient POV. I am basically in control of everyone, and I have to become each one for certain chapters, even if only for a few seconds.My latest project is based on real events that happened many years ago, so I find myself trying to do justice to the “ghosts” found lurking in the shadows. Spoken words are often in quotation marks because I hate writing “he said – she said” dialogue. I would rather describe what they are thinking and doing.
Sounds like you’ve got a strong handle on what’s working for you and your book, Edwina, good stuff. š It makes sense to avoid a lot of “he said” and “she said” if the dialogue can stand alone, too.
Thanks for asking, because I’m having a hideous time with conversations. I’ve written & published non-fiction for 20 years & somehow POV just slipped my mind. Now I’m actually publishing a novel & it’s horrid to be confined this way.
Here are a few sentences. One editor was quite angry about my doing this ‘head hopping.’ I honestly can’t help it. Do you know what I can do? My editor says to stick with one person’s pov per scene. If dialogue comes along, I don’t see how that’s possible. Hope you enjoy these characters talking…Let me know, if you could. Thanks!
She took a couple of sips, then her eyes swept around the room.
āHi, Dr. Cooper. Why donāt you two come join me? Iām too tired to move someplace better.ā
The two men grinned and came to sit with her.
Cooper said, āDrink your tea but donāt eat that lunch. Thatās an order.ā
She coughed. āWhoās your friend?ā
She heard herself being introduced to Titus, then learned that the two men had been friends for years. She smiled, they smiled. Dr. Cooper excused himself and left. Cody smiled and waited.
She stretched her hand out to Titus. āI think we forgot this partā¦ā
As soon as their hands touched, electricity scorched his fingers. His eyes blurred and his heart stopped.
He didnāt want her to know how he felt ā not yet He was trying to figure out what happened.
āI think itās this damned woman. Looks like Iāve met my match.ā
He was strong enough not to show a thing. He just looked normal.
He said āNice to meet you, Dr. Tredwell.ā
But sheād been watching him and she saw it all.
He still held her hand and he was smiling. She noticed how long and strong his fingers were.
She felt him squeeze her hand and saw his handsome lips smiling.
She turned her hand over so he could see the lines in her palm.
āA rich man like you must have some secret way of knowing who not to trust and whoāll make you even richer. Go on. Tell me what you see.ā
Hi Julia,
I think it’s a bit unreasonable of your editor to be angry with you — this IS confusing when you’re new to writing fiction because it’s something we don’t tend to even think about when reading.
I can see what you mean about “if dialogue comes along”. Let me try giving some suggested tweaks for your excerpt:
This first part seems to be from Cody’s point of view (though “her eyes swept around the room” is a bit external — I might write “she glanced around the room”).
She took a couple of sips, then her eyes swept around the room.
āHi, Dr. Cooper. Why donāt you two come join me? Iām too tired to move someplace better.ā
The two men grinned and came to sit with her.
Cooper said, āDrink your tea but donāt eat that lunch. Thatās an order.ā
She coughed. āWhoās your friend?ā
She heard herself being introduced to Titus, then learned that the two men had been friends for years. She smiled, they smiled. Dr. Cooper excused himself and left. Cody smiled and waited.
She stretched her hand out to Titus. āI think we forgot this partā¦ā
The line “She heard herself being introduced…” tells us we’re inside her head. (We find out what SHE heard, not what Titus heard.)
But then you jump to Titus’s viewpoint with the next line:
As soon as their hands touched, electricity scorched his fingers. His eyes blurred and his heart stopped.
You’re describing a reaction that only Titus can possible know about. Cody might perhaps make a guess, but she’d express it differently. If you want to stick with her viewpoint, describe what Cody actually sees or what she interprets. E.g. “As soon as their hands touched, Titus blinked at her. She thought he was going to flinch away.”
Later, you switch back to Cody with “But she’d been watching him and she saw it all.”
Of course, you don’t have to stick with one person for the whole novel — but I wouldn’t jump back and forth like this in a single scene. It’s easier for the reader to identify with one character at a time and to be in one head.
I think this scene is a tricky one for you because you want to show us both Titus’ reaction, how he thinks he’s hidden it and looks normal … but how she can see how he feels anyway. To avoid head-hopping, you need to decide who it’s more important to stick with here, Cody or Titus, then rewrite so everything’s inside that one person’s head.
Good luck!
Hi
I prefer limited third party. My manuscript is in limited third party. I like getting into different characters’ heads… even in the same scene. I admit head-hopping is an issue I’ve spent an inordinate amount of time on. I have re-read scenes in the manuscript over 50 times before noticing examples of it. It’s such an easy habit to fall into.
In this example, I’m in Logan’s head:
An hour after meals, the brunette reappeared by Loganās door. He removed his earphones.
āI apologize for not introducing myself earlier. Iām Brittanyā¦ thanks for helping out,ā she said.
āAnd, uhā¦ Iām Logan.ā
Sheād freshened-up after her meal, and her fragrance sent his pulse rate up. āCan you lend a hand with my hand-luggage? The zipās stuck, and I need to, umā¦ get something from it.ā That flight attendant was not gonna steal her manā¦ no way.
Hmmā¦ obviously, this lady had problems opening stuff. He unbuckled his seat belt hesitantly and stumbled to her suite, less nervous after two Scotches. She invited him to sit on the ottoman.
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So I was narrating in Logan’s skin and then head-hopped into Brittany’s when she mused: “That flight attendant was not gonna steal her man… no way.”
I don’t use markers. Anyway… let me continue my 90th review of this manuscript. I’ve been working on it over 3 years now and getting ready to look for a publisher….lol.
For me as a reader, I’d prefer to be firmly in one head or the other. But it’s your book! š Good luck with the review and the submitting to publishers.