leonard267 wrote...
It read like 3rd person to me. It seems to be neither in James nor Walter's point of view. If you have the time, is it alright for you to point out the awkward sentences?
It is obviously a third-person narrator, but you might be right that it is neither James nor Walter's perspective. Parts of the story just felt like that to me, but while rereading I am not so sure.
HumbugsAssociate wrote...
James saw that figure to be the work of somone very sadistic, but he didn't dare say so.
HumbugsAssociate wrote...
James's sight moved to a row of benches, there sat some men, apparenty the olds mans friends, somewhere in their sixties.
HumbugsAssociate wrote...
This was all obvious to James, giving the occasional pat on Walter's back to signify his suffering of his friends tragedy, or rather, acting it
HumbugsAssociate wrote...
Afterwords, the coffin was carried away slowly and carefully, supposedly out of respect, but James imagined it must be in case someone tripped and fell.
HumbugsAssociate wrote...
A thunderous applause like no other followed while Walter stepped down, trying to hold his tears from despair. His chin was trembling wildly from grief, but he felt empowered by the crowd as if there were a thousand angels rushing the wind behind his back before he sat down beside James.
All of this is of course in third-person, but it actually seems more obvious to me now. The story appears to follow James as he is the only character who's thoughts we see - at least for the most part.
The last quote, as you can see, shows us Walter's thoughts. We don't see the thoughts of the other characters though - hence we do not see their perspectives, only James' and Walters'.
Some awkward sentences:
HumbugsAssociate wrote...
When he woke up from his daydream, he noticed Walter eyeing him furiously in a corner as religious songs made the atmosphere mildly lively.
HumbugsAssociate wrote...
Walter's mother, Edna, held her small mother tightly with pursed lips and a costly new handbag just for the occasion, for even at her fathers death, she cared a bit more about her fashion than acting two hours of obligatory mourning.
HumbugsAssociate wrote...
Whoever made the audience cry and applaud hardest would be the winner for the prize of everyones favorite person for the rest of the year with a showering of affection.