Answer:
A story’s point of view determines the reader’s perspective on events.
Explanation:
A story's point of view refers to the perspective from which the story is being told (in first, second or third person), and since the reader can only see the story through this perspective, it determines the reader's perspective on events, characters, and places.
For example, in stories told in the first-person point of view, the narrator is also a character (usually one of the main characters) and they reveal the plot through their viewpoint, thus, readers get to see the story from a subjective perspective; in stories narrated in third person, the narrator is an outsider looker, and readers can get to know many of the characters from a more unbiased perspective; lastly, in stories told in second-person point of view, the narrator tells the story as if they were addressing the readers, or as if the story was told by you, the reader, and it uses pronoun like you and yours.