There is something bold about a story that starts with “I.” It doesn’t wait for permission. It pulls you in, hands you the narrator’s shoes, and says, “Walk with me.” First-person point of view is one ...
Some wag once called the book of Deuteronomy “the Torah reading’s version of summer reruns” because significant sections of its narrative review what we have previously read in the fall, winter and ...
The house of fiction has many windows, but only two or three doors. I can tell a story in the third person or in the first person, and perhaps in the second person singular, or in the first person ...
Style, Vol. 54, No. 1, Special Issue: We-Narratives and We-Discourses across Genres (2020), pp. 1-6 (6 pages) https://doi.org/10.5325/style.54.1.0001 • https://www ...