Veronica Roth Explains Why Allegiant was Written in Two POVs

If you missed the recent announcement, Veronica Roth has given us yet another surprise. Allegiant, the third book in the Divergent trilogy, is written in alternating points of views featuring Tris and Four! Although we all trust her with what she has planned, for the skeptics and curious minds out there, Veronica has explained via her tumblr why the finale of the series was written in two points of views. She sparks up important subjects that really give us an insight into her thought process throughout this third book:

In case you haven’t heard already, I confirmed on Thursday that Allegiant will be written from two POVs (points of view), Tris and Four’s. This is obviously a departure from how I chose to write the first two books, which has a lot of people excited (yay!) and some concerned, so I thought I would say a little more about it here.

So: why two POVs? Well, I tried repeatedly to write Allegiant in just Tris’s voice, but it didn’t work; her perspective, her way of seeing things, was a little too limited for the story I needed to tell. I wanted to do two things with it: A. let two characters experience different things, and B. let them react differently to the same things, so that I (and eventually, the reader) would get a better sense of the whole story, the whole picture.

I’ve said before that I’ve always seen Four (increasingly, as the series goes on) as a plot-mover alongside Tris, so he was the obvious choice for the second POV (though not the only one I tried). Exploring him and his choices and his assumptions about the world was incredibly interesting to me.

It was a big challenge, it took me a really long time, and I did my very best with it. I feel confident about the way it turned out, and I hope you enjoy it! On October 22nd! AHH!

 

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