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With the exception of the introduction and the final chapter in the second part of the novel, Brian Selznick tells "The Invention of Hugo Cabret" from the third-person limited omniscient point of view. The narrator, as it turns out, is Hugo himself, telling a story through the workings of an automaton he has crafted to tell his own story, as though he were an outsider to the events that transpired in his life. The novel is told in limited-omniscience in order to create suspense and build up mysteries which must then be solved.