SPOILER ALERT: If you
haven’t read The Murder of Roger Ackroyd by Agatha Christie or Rebecca
by Daphne du Maurier but intend to do so in the future, you may want to skip this
post.
Usually, the term “unreliable
narrator” is used for a first-person narrator who the author has set up to
mislead the reader. The unreliability is always intentional by the author, and
sometimes—although not always—by the character.
The Murder of Roger
Ackroyd uses a narrator who intentionally misleads the reader by leaving
out some vital information. Dr. Sheppard is a likeable man, and for most of the
book we believe he is trying to give us a neutral picture of both the events
leading up to the murder and Hercule Poirot’s attempts to solve it. So the
reader is surprised when Poirot unmasks Dr. Sheppard as the murderer.
An example of an unreliable
narrator who is not intentionally misleading comes from Rebecca. Rebecca was the first Mrs. de Winter, and the narrator is the second one. When she hears part of Rebecca’s story but not all of it, her overactive imagination fills in the rest.
But this post goes beyond
the traditional meaning of the term “unreliable narrator.” I’m taking it
literally.
Only omniscient narrators
can be completely reliable. Every other type of narrator has human failings and
gets some things wrong. Readers should understand that everything they assume
is fact might not be.
For example, I’m
currently working on a middle-grade historical novel with two third-person
protagonists. Will and Meg are twins with a similar upbringing but differing perspectives.
Will simply doesn’t view the facts the same way Meg does. Since I use each one’s
voice and impressions throughout that person’s point-of-view chapter, any
reader who says “I read it in the narrative so it must be true” is deluded.
This comes up even when
there is only one POV character or when the POV characters agree. A
twelve-year-old girl who is hungry might think of herself as starving even
though that isn’t literally true. But that’s how she thinks of it, so that is
how the narrative portrays it.
One caveat. Some writers
step back from their characters and write narrative that doesn’t match the
characters’ thoughts. Those authors might be able to get away with limiting
their narrative to “truth.” But I don’t write that way. I write the narrative
to match the character’s thoughts, and his or her ideas may be wrong.
So don’t believe
everything you read.
No comments:
Post a Comment