Point of View and Narrator
Point of View and Narrator
Narrator
A first-person narrator is one who tells a story and participates in its action. A third-person narrator is one who stands outside the action and speaks about it.
Point of View
Point of view is the perspective or vantage point, from which a story is told. It is either a narrator outside the story or a character in the story.
The narrator is a character in the story. The character/protagonist must experience everything with his/her senses or be told about something. As the reader, you experience the story only from what that character knows, thinks, and feels.
Note: The writer may choose to use limited or omniscient point of view either throughout the entire work or in a specific section.
Third-person limited
In stories told from the limited third-person point of view, the narrator relates the inner thoughts and feelings of only one character, and everything is viewed from this characters perspective.
Third-person omniscient
In stories told from the omniscient thirdperson point of view, the narrator knows and may tell about what each character feels and thinks.