Looking for an example of a short story or novel that ...

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syku

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Dear all,

I would appreciate some examples of a short story or novel that was written with a first-person point of view, but the main character "I" 's sex is opposite to that of the author.

Thanks
 
You're not being ignored, syku.

We're thinking.

It's a tough one. There aren't many.

For some reason it creeps me out a bit when that happens.

Rover
 
i have read many short stories but still no story is coming in my mind with first narration and opposite to writer's sex..
 
There was a craze for epistolary novels in the seventeenth century.[FONT=&quot]
[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]Some popular ones were Clarissa and Pamela by Samuel Richardson.[/FONT][FONT=&quot] The novels were actually exchanges of letters from young girls to their parents, or to other young girls etc. about beastly men, so this probably counts as 1st person. Anyhow, you can check them out here: [/FONT]
Pamela, or Virtue Rewarded by Samuel Richardson - Project Gutenberg

Here’s another I read recently: “Memoirs of a Geisha is a novel by Arthur Golden, published in 1997. The novel, told in first person perspective, tells the fictional story of a geisha working in Kyoto, Japan, before and after World War II.”
[FONT=&quot]Memoirs of a Geisha - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia[/FONT]
 
Wow, surprised no one has posted the staple of American high school English classes: The Outsiders by S. E. Hinton. The author was a young girl but the central figure and first person point of view was that of Ponyboy Curtis, a young boy.
 
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There was a craze for epistolary novels in the seventeenth century.[FONT=&quot]
[/FONT]
[FONT=&quot]Some popular ones were Clarissa and Pamela by Samuel Richardson.[/FONT][FONT=&quot] The novels were actually exchanges of letters from young girls to their parents, or to other young girls etc. about beastly men, so this probably counts as 1st person. Anyhow, you can check them out here: [/FONT]
Pamela, or Virtue Rewarded by Samuel Richardson - Project Gutenberg

Fielding's parody Shamela is good.

Didn't Julian Barnes do one or am I imagining that? He's one writer I have always really hated, though.
 
Thanks, everyone. I have a tendency to think that boys and girls are "sexless" until they become men and women, but I could be wrong.
 
Thanks, everyone. I have a tendency to think that boys and girls are "sexless" until they become men and women, but I could be wrong.
"Young girls" in this context means "young women".
Also, Geisha's are generally post-pubertal, as far I know.
 
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