Amy asked a couple of weeks ago to see a post on unreliable narrators and I thought that was a great idea.
First we need to understand what an unreliable narrator is. Does that mean the MC lies? Well, it can. But it can mean more than that as well. No matter who is telling a story, his own perceptions, memories, and feelings will influence what he recalls or even if he recalls what actually happened. So as a writer when I write in first person, I have to find the character's voice and experience everything from her perspective.
What am I saying? Character is everything in this situation. That and filtering through the character's eyes. If your MC is conceited, for example, a great way to show that is to have her make an obviously neutral situation all about her.
But if you're writing a story that needs an unreliable narrator for plot purposes here are some rules to remember:
- Don't keep vital information from your readers. That will only frustrate them. That doesn't mean you have to spill everything up front, but don't deliberately keep them out of the loop just so you can surprise them later. Plant clues by making it clear that the narrator may not be trustworthy. Drip in the real info like you do backstory.
- Stay true to your character. Don't take a truthful MC and suddenly have her lie for no good reason just because you need a way to do something. It's true characters can do surprising things, but if you've done a good job getting into his head, you will also have planted enough info that makes that unconventional act/decision natural and understandable to the reader.
- Have fun! Unreliable narrators can be a blast to write. It's a great opportunity to exercise that illusive voice. In fact, it's not a bad idea to go ahead and practice just for an exercise. Who knows? Maybe you'll end up falling in love and writing a whole book. ;D
Any other tips? Examples? Share!!
I think one good unreliable but likeable character is Sage from The False Prince. Great things to consider.
ReplyDeleteGreat advice! I agree, you shouldn't hide information from readers just to keep certain twists shocking. There are so many ways to plant clues that will only seem obvious during re-reads, so why not go that route instead of angering readers with deliberate information exclusion?
ReplyDeleteI haven't tried writing with an unreliable narrator yet - they're tough! I have read a few where we as readers realize the character is flaky & missing stuff & that adds to the fun!
ReplyDeleteThese are great tips. Mine? Read books w/unreliable narrators. Like that book Chime. Very good. Thanks, LG! :o) <3
ReplyDeleteI notice a lot in contest entries, agents are always saying "I love this unreliable narrator!"
ReplyDeleteI've been thinking about this a lot lately. Good one!
I have tried on several occasions to write a book with an unreliable narrator, but so far without success. I think it is a difficult technique to master. My favorite such story is Surfacing by Margaret Atwood. I read it 25 years ago and it still blows my mind. I wish I could write like that.
ReplyDeleteThese are great tips! I've never written an unreliable character, but I admire writers who do, and pull it off.
ReplyDeleteI think an unreliable character would be a great challenge. Hmmmm, isn't Nano coming up?
ReplyDeleteTo be honest, I'm usually not a fan of unreliable narrators. I want to trust the person who's telling the story! But sometimes they can be very effective. Great tips!
ReplyDeleteCool post. My current MC will probably be unreliable, but that's just part of what she's going through, and not through any design of my own. Thanks for clarifying the muddle!
ReplyDeleteGreat post, Lisa. I'm going to go an practice what you preach. You'll see ... :)
ReplyDeleteHugs,
M.
Nice article, thanks for the information.
ReplyDeleteI've always wanted to write an unreliable narrator but it seems to hard! These tips make me think maybe I can do it though. Thank you!
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