Interesting. Other than classical novels like Pamela, writers avoid second person mode of narration and it's relegated almost entirely to letter writing genres. The selection featured is vaguely reminiscent of the style of travelogues.
Personally, I've gone from third person omniscent mode, which I employed in my first novel, A Familiar Rain, to first person participant narrator mode which I adopted after reading Jack Finney's, Time and Again.
Regarding voice, that's a very elusive quality to define - for me, it's my personality on paper, but even that doesn't say much. I guess I believe in the Jack Kerouac school of hard knocks - before you can have a voice you have to be somebody first, and that comes from isolation and suffering in my experience. I like the way you structured this post - you remind me of the fellow who used to run the fiction channel on here and who shared his various WIP's. Good work.
RE: Finding Your Voice as a Writer