Idril Aravis Mimetes wrote:
I think there's a term for narrating a story from different POVs. In literature class, we called it third person omnipresent (not sure if that's a term all writers/editors use), meaning that the story can be told from any point of view of any character as chosen by the author. So you're in full control over what still happens and how much you will reveal.
"Third person omni
scient", you mean?
The thing about third person omniscient is that you're not writing from the POV of any of the characters, you're writing from the POV of an observer who knows everything including what all the characters are thinking at all times. So, just like any other POV, you need to make this obvious at the beginning of every scene you write in a third-person-omniscient POV.
And while it is a theoretical possibility, and not uncommon in "literary" fiction, as I said in my first comments above, third-person-limited has become the convention in the fantasy genre (I meant as opposed to third-person-omniscient and third-person-observer---the latter being the opposite of "omniscient," a narrator who knows nothing at all about the thoughts, motivations, and feelings of any of the characters---not as opposed to first-person), and like most conventions should be followed unless you have good reason not to.
Idril Aravis Mimetes wrote:
I think writing in third person omnipresent is a bit more difficult as we have to work so that the transition from one character's thoughts to the other won't be so awkward. Christopher Paolini does this by giving each character its own chapter.
Then that's not third-person-omniscient, it's third-person-limited with multiple POV characters---which is, as I said, the most common form in modern, recent, fantasy in my experience.
Thanks for bringing this up.

To put the position I've advocated above another way: Head-hopping in a third-person narrative, unless you've clearly established an omniscient narrator as the primary POV "character", is just as confusing (and thus contraindicated) as head-hopping in a first-person narrative. You wouldn't switch narrators in mid-scene in a first-person narrative, and the same reasons apply nearly as strongly to a third-person-limited POV.