Creativity Magazine

You Are Stopped at a Railroad Crossing . . .

By Vickilane
You Are Stopped at a Railroad Crossing . . .

You're stopped there and you're thinking about the blog post you want to do on using second person point of view in a piece of fiction.  Second person -- you rather than I or he/she -- is only rarely used in fiction. Cookbooks do it all the time -- Now you mince the garlic -- as do self help books -- You concentrate on the candle flame, seeking to clear your mind of all cluttering thoughts. 
It makes perfect sense in these cases -- but in a novel? You wonder why would someone do that. You Are Stopped at a Railroad Crossing . . .
One of your students is writing a novel in which some of the chapters are in the second person. The others in the class are struggling with it but you find it oddly compelling and so you do some research on the use of the second person point of view in fiction.  You Are Stopped at a Railroad Crossing . . .
You find mention of Bright Lights, Big City -- Jay McInerney's very successful novel depicting wild youth in the midst of cocaine culture -- using the second person point of view, You remember reading this and remember the feeling of being hurtled along on a very wild ride indeed.  You Are Stopped at a Railroad Crossing . . .
Then you pick up a copy of The Best American Short Stories of 2013 and read a story (originally published in The New Yorker) by Pulitzer Prize winner and best seller Junot Diaz. The story, "Miss Lora,," is written in the second person point of view.  And it's fun to read. You think that it seems to put you, the reader, right into the head of Yunior, the main character.
You Are Stopped at a Railroad Crossing . . .
Then you read an interview with Junot Diaz in which he says he uses the second person to create some distance -- to "challenge the reader and to signal the writerliness of the book."  And so you say, Okay, whatever. But you've learned something to share with your class next Wednesday. And you appear to have written a blog post too.   

You Are Stopped at a Railroad Crossing . . .

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