Acts of Desperation

What is the narrator point of view in the novel, Acts of Desperation?

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The point of view is a focused, limited first-person narration. Unlike traditional first-person narration in which that perspective encourages sympathy, even empathy for the narrator, the point of view here is more conflicted. Because of the nature of her fascination with her own emotional ups and downs, how she believes that every moment of happiness will inevitably be rendered ironic and engender waves of sorrow or depression, the novel offers the sort of claustrophobic narrowing point of view typical of a diary.

Source(s)

Acts of Desperation, BookRags