You need a different narrator depending on your theme. If you're telling an emotional tale with lots of introspection, you'd want a first-person narrator. If you're telling an action story, you'd want a third-person narrator - and depending on what your theme is, you'd pick the character best able to get that theme across to the readers. In other words, it depends on what you're trying to say to the readers.
The narrator of the story is the character who tells the story to the audience. They may be a first-person narrator who is a character in the story, a third-person narrator who shares the story from an outside perspective, or an omniscient narrator who knows everything about the characters and events. The narrator's perspective and reliability can significantly influence the reader's understanding of the story.
Everybody sees the world differently - they each have their own point of view. Stories vary depending on who is telling them. Think about the story of the Three Little Pigs - how different would that be if the wolf told it?
Quiet
The narrator is the voice that tells the story, while the author is the creator of the story. The narrator can be a character in the story or an unseen observer, while the author is the individual who actually wrote the story.
Loud quiet
The tone is how the narrator feels about the story. It could be a sad story but the narrator talks about it angrily making the tone angry.
The narrator is the voice that tells a story, providing the audience with information about the characters, events, and setting. They can be a character within the story (first-person) or an unseen observer (third-person), influencing the reader's perception and understanding of the narrative. The narrator's perspective and reliability can impact how the story is interpreted by the audience.
The person who tells the story is the narrator.
the narrator is the person (or animal) that is telling the story. The author writes the story, but the story is told by the narrator.
This describes a first-person narrator. In this type of narration, the story is told from the perspective of one character (in this case, William) using pronouns like "I" and "me."
The narrator describes his house in the story "Araby" as dark, musty, and cluttered. He also mentions that the former tenant, a priest, had died in the house and left behind old yellowed books.
The narrator is at home in bed at the beginning of the story.
This is a framed story- the narrator of the frame story is the Hebrew teacher & the secretary is the narrator of the framed story.
No, a narrator is a storyteller.