it is about a three century great grandma who is being reported by the news cast and she lies to them about everything.
Can be either, depends on point of view written from
Megan is the narrator of The Three Century-Woman.
Megan is the narrator.
In the 21st century
at a mall
he saw three dancing skeltons
why did the narrator not want to go inside miss crosmans house why does miss crosman give the narrator the umbrella why is the narrator bothered by her mothers lateness
billy-bob Joel
There are typically three main types of perspectives: first-person (narrator is a character in the story), second-person (narrator addresses the reader as "you"), and third-person (narrator is an outside observer). Each perspective offers a different way of presenting and experiencing a story.
The narrator is an unidentified number of people. They probably represent the three generations of townspeople that the story spans. As such, you may consider the narrator to practically be society itself in the post Civil War era.
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.
yes the story id fitcion