Harlequin has a good point, Satyesu. Many of the questions you have been asking around here lately are not easy questions with quick-tip solutions. That's good, because it means the questions you are thinking about go right to the heart of storytelling and good writing. But to develop answers to these questions, one of the best things you can do for yourself is read a lot and read widely. Are you doing that? Everything you read will show you new ways to answer every single question you have asked here.
Everything you read can give you new ideas about how to do things in your novel - ideas about how to structure things, how to convey emotions, what kinds of events should happen in the novel, how to ratchet up the stakes, how to generate a consistent voice, how different types of POV affect the reader's experience of the story, and on and on and on.
That's not to say that you can't also ask questions about all those ideas and discuss them here - those discussions can be very fruitful and interesting. But if you're not already reading like mad, and reading with your writer-brain engaged to discover what other writers are doing with their tools, you're neglecting the best opportunities you have to learn.