Well, is the author saying "I" or is he using "He, she, they"? If he's using, "I", then the essay is in the first-person. If it uses the latter, then it's third person.
Narrative fiction is the succession of events narrated in verbal medium. The events do not have to be real, they can be taking place in a possible world, but the elements of the narrative have to constitute a coherent whole.
A narrative essay is written as though telling a story about the topic, and should always have a point and written from a clear point of view. Argumentative essays are more standard, investigating a topic and establishing a position and defending it through gathered evidence.
Your point of view in an essay is, essentially, a first person view. You speak of things from yourself, your own opinions, and your own information. However, most teachers and professors will emphasize the fact that you should use the words "I" and "me" as little as possible, as the essay is not about you, it is simply from your point of view on a certain subject.
An essay tilted towards one point of view on a topic .
The point of view is third person.
Usually it's third-person narrative, in an omniscient point of view.
First Person
An informational narrative is a nonfiction book writen in the author's point of view.
yes it is
First person account
Narrative shift
The song "Calypso" by John Denver is written in the first person narrative point of view, as the singer is telling the story from his own perspective.