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Edited on Thu Oct-14-10 11:08 PM by vixengrl
It seems to me that I've read first-person narratives that were just kind of written to me, the reader (or any other person privileged to find the story) and it never bothered me that it was in first person--so long as the author gave the narrator a distinctive voice or recognizable character. It might have been like stumbling across a diary or a very personal blog.
I think there might be a "fourth wall" issue with the style. On one hand, let's say I'm just telling you, who might be anybody, about some stuff that happened to me because I'm open like that. You know I'm talking to you--and depending on my story, you mind not even care why. But on the other hand, does a kind of fourth wall get introduced the moment you find that your narrator is really addressing some inquisitive police detectives, or writing a memoir for his progeny? The "you" that the author makes up for the purposes of addressing then become at least sketchy characters in the narrative. Sometimes that might serve the story--but other times it might not: there just might not be a plausible audience. And then you go for first person anyway because you can hear this voice of your narrator in your head, or you get out the pages with a blue pen and rewrite the whole damn lead-in in third person because omniscient view-point serves what you want to accomplish better.
I think the rule as is is arbitrary. What best serves the story, and what the author chooses to reveal....or withhold, should determine the perspective. I've written stories where I slowly reveal my first person narrator is basically unreliable, self-involved, prone to romanticizing, and the unreliability was the point. And she's rambling on because her mind just works that way--she confesses, almost to herself, almost in real-time as she figures out what she wants to believe. Her audience might as well have been herself. And trying to negotiate a third-party between her internal monologue and the reader would just intrude.
Edit: Speeeeled badly.
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