It was a story spoken through the eyes of a child that pure Nigerian novelist Wole Soyinka remembered that he used words with a third party at AkéAké. Many events and conversations of these events are written with tones that imply innocence and behavior that can only be done in childlike state of mind. Soyinka skillfully uses this tone and combines the main uses of the first person of storytelling to create realistic childhood paintings.
From a literary point of view, what we deal with objectively here is a simple story transformation from first-person, innocent six-year-old to third-person New York street adult. As Syreeta McFadden said, "We are all Boy Scouts, children are disappointed with the ideal version of our parents." Harper Lee wrote a novel draft in 1957 and submitted it to the editor. Twenty years ago, from the perspective of her, Jean Louise of 26 year old Go Set a Watchman was rewritten as the story of the childhood of Scout. In the first draft, Lee discovered the voice of the scout, and completely learned and learned the characteristics of Atticus with the book "Killing a Robin" published in 1960. This is the final version, a completed literary work.
First person stories and third person stories are two levels of unreliable narrator candidates. Firstly, the narrator of the story should not provide information that can not be obtained in the role of ideology, and in a more difficult version he may not be able to provide the information he has. That role has no vocabulary and necessary background knowledge. Secondly, the narrator may refuse to tell us what the viewer knows or is looking at at the critical junction.