it is written in the point of view of Bella, which is first person
It's writing from Bella's point of view
In the few books I have read by James Patterson, he writes in first person point-of-view.
That depends. If the story is fictional, or not real, then the point of view is most likely of the protagonist or main character. Some books which use 3rd person or 3rd person omnipresent don't have a point of view or change points of views from character to character. (1st person is from the protagonist's point of view, 2nd is from you, or the reader's point of view and is very uncommon, and 3rd person or 3rd person omnipresent is from multiple points of view, constantly changing or from an omnipresent point of view, or a point of view where you the reader can see everything that's going on) If it's non fiction, or a book on something real, then the point of view is most likely always from the person the book is about, or 3rd person, again. If you can't tell where the point of view is, just look at which character the book is writing about.
A Narrative is written in first person (one of the main characters tells the story from their point of view)for example, Final Fantasy X is a Narrative - It is told from Tidus' point of view.So no SpongeBob is not a Narrative.
The sentence "You are the sunshine of my life" is written in the second person point of view, where the speaker is addressing the listener or reader directly.
It is written in first person, Bella Swan's point of view, for the first third. Then for the second third, it is written in first person, Jacob Black's point of view. Finally, the last third is written in first person, Bella Swan's point of view.
Bright Lights, Big City
The perspective from which a text is written is called the point of view. This can be first person, second person, or third person, and it determines the relationship between the narrator and the events of the story.
The word "you" is second person point of view. It refers to the person or people being spoken to.
A recipe is written in second person. One of the rare instances of the point of view. The 'you' is implied in every instruction. (You) take to eggs. (You) mix all ingredients together.
Most cook books and other books of instruction are written in second person where the second person pronouns are assumed or inferred. The second person is rarely used as a POV and when it is it is usually not sustain through-out the work. For a list of works employing the second person see link.
The word "your" is second person point of view, as it refers to the person being spoken to.
Subject can be any person point of view, depending on who or what is being discussed in the context of a sentence. First person point of view represents the speaker or writer (I, we), second person represents the person being spoken to (you), and third person represents others being spoken about (he, she, they).
Second Person is written as "you." Everything you say must be from that point of view. For example: You get up in the morning and get out of bed. You see that it has snowed overnight. You go outside and walk to the park.
Second person POV is very confusing.
Memoirs are written in 1st person point of view, that was a very good question you asked there.