When a narrator is narrating the story to another character through that character's point of view, that is called a second-person narrative.
Second person is most commonly used in essays or instructions and stories, and is rarely used in fictional stories. The pronoun "you" usually refers to the reader or a younger version of the narrator.
When using the second person, the narrator will rarely narrate directly to the reader, as though the reader is a character in the story. The use of second person narration is rare outside of interactive fiction and the Choose Your Own Adventure series of novels, though it has been used in at least a few popular novels, most notably Italo Calvino's If On a Winter's Night a Traveler (1979), Jay McInerney's Bright Lights, Big City (1985), Tom Robbins' Half Asleep in Frog Pajamas (1994), and in Carlos Fuentes' The Death of Artemio Cruz it occupied a third of the novel, with narrations in first and third persons being the other two thirds; all three of them telling the same story from different points in its timeline. Second person could also be used by a character when narrating to an amnesiac character.
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"Second-person narrative".
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