10-10-2011, 10:38 AM
I was reading an extract from We Need to Talk About Kevin, by Lionel Shriver, a few days ago when I started thinking about how novels written in the first person must have a hard time staying true to how people talk casually while maintaining an aesthetic. We Need to Talk About Kevin is written in the form of letters from a woman to her ex-husband. It seemed heavy on metaphor, imagery and elegant, flowing lines, which is what I expect from a novel, but is it how people write letters?
Lolita made sense to me because it was written as the memoirs of a man who considered himself a poet and had studied literature. He wasn't some average Joe who suddenly starts spouting Shakespearean verse.
I generally prefer third person prose as first to me is often messy and unrewarding, the inescapable subjectivity a distraction from the novel’s (or short story’s) style.
What are you thoughts on this? Do you prefer first, third or sometimes even second person prose?
Lolita made sense to me because it was written as the memoirs of a man who considered himself a poet and had studied literature. He wasn't some average Joe who suddenly starts spouting Shakespearean verse.
I generally prefer third person prose as first to me is often messy and unrewarding, the inescapable subjectivity a distraction from the novel’s (or short story’s) style.
What are you thoughts on this? Do you prefer first, third or sometimes even second person prose?
"We believe that we invent symbols. The truth is that they invent us; we are their creatures, shaped by their hard, defining edges." - Gene Wolfe


