In the book, the author narrates his pain and confusion as he grieved his father's death by suicide.
In the book, the author narrates his candid recollections of moving to Quebec in 1996.
In the novel, the author narrates a tale in which an aeroplane crash landed near a riverbed, in the early 1920s.
Geoffrey of Vinsauf distinguishes between the natural order and the artificial or artistic order in which the author can narrate the events.
The author narrates the story in a way that time and space are all blurred as we get totally immersed in her flashbacks.
The author narrates in his Friendster account how he had come up the story of the book.
Diegesis, however, is the telling of the story by a narrator; the author narrates action indirectly and describes what is in the characters' minds and emotions.
It contains various pauranika stories about suras, asuras and Krishna which the author narrates to his wife.
The author narrates the same story differently, applying what Contreras called "economy of language" and adding a significant change in the final.
In 1980 the author narrated the story on an episode of the Canadian TV series "Fast Forward."