What are some books that think outside the linear first- or third-person storyline? Some examples I can think of include:

  • Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi The book starts out with two sisters separated in the trans-Atlantic slave trade. One stays in Africa, the other is taken to America. The rest of the book bounces back and forth between across the ocean, each covering a direct descendant of these two women for about 300 years. The author had to create a character, world, and story for each individual chapter of the book, basically making the reader connect with this newly-introduced person in the span of just a few pages.

  • Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold The narrator is telling her story after having been murdered.

  • Inland by Téa Obreht One half of the book told the story of a woman struggling in the American southwest in the 1800s. It took me a good while to figure out who was narrating the other half of the book: >!A dead body riding around on camelback.!<

  • Always Never by Jordi Lefabre This one’s a graphic novel told backwards. Chapter 1 is actually the end of the story, and each chapter works its way back in time until you arrive at the last chapter, which is the beginning of the story.

EDIT: Adding Asymmetry by Lisa Halliday. Two different narrators break the book up into three parts: Alice’s story part 1, Amar’s story, then Alice’s story part 2. I had to read the reviews after finishing this story to figure out what the author has done, but it was brilliant.

  • Nedgodfather@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    A pagan place by Edna O’Brien is written in the 2nd person which works to symbolise the lack of identity and independence the character and many Irish women of the time lacked