The narrator of the book calls himself an invisible man because people refuse to see him for who he really is.
The narrator calls the pair "lasting symbols of postwar America's political repression."
The narrator calls the agent who promises to bring a French lawyer to the trial.
The narrator calls the dead man "my brother."
The narrator calls this "an act strange enough in an Englishman," and you'll probably agree.
The "confusion of second persons" comes from the fact that the narrator calls the protagonist "you" throughout, even though the two are the same man.
In the bar the narrator calls June, his ex-girlfriend.
In the program, the narrator always calls the creatures "Entelodonts", instead of the specific genus name.
He tries hard to be nice to Billy, and, more than once, the narrator calls him fatherly.
On a hot summer night, the narrator calls a friend and they walk the city streets together.