Sagot :
Answer:
Here you simply present characters’ actions and dialogues to the reader. The narrator doesn’t explicitly tell the reader what a character thinks or feels. [You could argue, of course, that there is only limited POV, and the difference between ‘limited’ and ‘objective’ is whether the author does more telling or showing (this would be ‘objective’).]
Limiting narration to only neutral observation is useful for avoiding telling readers’ feelings more than showing them.
Explanation:
For example, you could write ‘the boy ran in circles, like a footballer just after his victory goal’. This conveys the character is celebrating something and is happy, without the narrator delving into his mind and telling his feelings (e.g. ‘The boy was happy he’d scored a goal’).