We engage with stories daily, experiencing situations from the perspectives of different fictional characters. Language allows us to do this with the use of reports, that is, constructions representing what someone said, thought, or felt. This dissertation focuses on reports and their role in story comprehension. Such constructions are, for instance, Direct Discourse ("Aargh, I will never make it!" he thought) and Indirect Discourse (He thought that he would never make it). The central research question is: How do reports influence readers to take a fictional character's perspective in narratives? I particularly investigate Free Indirect Discourse, a kind of report construction that does not explicitly say whose perspective it represents, a...