What was most fun in writing Fear of Beauty? Switching back and forth in point of view between two diverse characters, an illiterate Afghan woman and an Army Ranger in charge of security of a nearby outpost. First-person point of view suits Sofi, and the more distant third-person suits Joey.
Kristen Elise of Murder Lab analyzes the back-and-forth point of view in Fear of Beauty. She explains that the book's "two subplots mesh at the beginning of Chapter 7" and describes the "approach of juxtaposing the first- and third-person perspectives as hallmarks of independent subplots" as "a fabulous way to include the intimacy of a first-person perspective while, in parallel, allowing the reader to observe scenes that the first-person protagonist would not have been privy to."
Her analysis is sharp, maybe because of her scientific background as a cancer drug discovery biologist within a major pharmaceutical
company and as author of The Vesuvius Isotope and The Death Row Complex.
Those who write a book discover that reading other books is never the same. Writers are judges. Do check out Murder Lab.
Image courtesy of Murder Lab.