Ultimate Popsugar Reading Challenge discussion
2017 Challenge prompts
>
A book with an unreliable narrator
message 151:
by
Kirsten
(new)
Mar 30, 2017 12:25PM

reply
|
flag

Erika wrote: "Has anybody read Everything You Want Me to Be by Mindy Mejia? I'm wondering if this book might fit the category? I'm about halfway through it and it just keeps getting weirder. The main character c..."
I'm reading it right now! I'm almost halfway through, and so far no one seems particularly unreliable, but maybe there is a Big Reveal just around the corner or something. I will report back when I've finished.
I'm reading it right now! I'm almost halfway through, and so far no one seems particularly unreliable, but maybe there is a Big Reveal just around the corner or something. I will report back when I've finished.

There's the "published in 2017" category! I'm just reading it to read it - if it works for unreliable narrator, that'll be a bonus.
I just finished Everything You Want Me to Be last night, and yeah, I don't think it had an unreliable narrator, just unreliable witnesses giving testimony to the Sheriff (but none of them were narrators). So this category is still wide open for me. I'm about to get back to reading The Killer Inside Me and hoping that will qualify. If not, I know Fight Club will work and that's TBR for me.
I finished The Killer Inside Me and it does NOT qualify for "unreliable narrator" - he's deceptive to people around him, but his inner voice that the reader is privy to is quite reliable. That's my second strike out! This category is difficult!
Has anyone read Jesus' Son? Do you think that qualifies? He's not really concealing anything or trying to be deceptive, but he's in such a drugged out haze at times that it's hard to tell what's true.
I've been meaning to read Fight Club for a while now, so I think I'll just read that one for this category.
Has anyone read Jesus' Son? Do you think that qualifies? He's not really concealing anything or trying to be deceptive, but he's in such a drugged out haze at times that it's hard to tell what's true.
I've been meaning to read Fight Club for a while now, so I think I'll just read that one for this category.

Nadine, her books are quite different from each other. However the writing style tends to be similar. The Blind Assassin has a bit less bite, being a family saga, but that means the writing is even more the focus.
I personally adore her writing, I think it is genius. She could write about paint peeling and it would be witty, dark, sensual and probably predicting the end of the world.
But I can see that her style is not everyone's cup of tea. You have to like dark, intellectual, and having to fill in the blanks. I think her writing in The Handmaid's Tale is the most approachable, so if you did not like it, you probably won't like her other books, either.

I read that one for book club. I liked it. It is about as unreliable a narrator as you get - she forgets everything that happened, every night when she goes to sleep. Great thriller!







I'm torn between reading The Buried Giant and We Were Liars.



Totally agree! It's an amazing book. I also read it a couple of years ago, and it still sticks with me. I'm not sure how unreliable the narrator is though. He's telling the story from his own perspective for sure and probably doesn't have all the information, but it's not like he has amnesia or anything like that to make the information he does give unreliable...
I am reading The Stars Are Legion by Kameron Hurley right now, and it would work for this category. The main character has amnesia after a battle.
This is a VERY weird book, quite unlike any other science fiction I've read. It took about 100 pages for me to finally decide I liked it; before then, I was just so disoriented, I didn't know what to think of it. To start with, the main character has amnesia (and she has had amnesia "hundreds of times" before), so you have no idea what is happening, what has happened before, who she can trust, or what the people around her might be planning. And then on top of that, it's set in a very odd world, somewhere in outer space, where people live inside creatures that are sort of planets and sort of spaceships. There are different, uh, nationalities, they are fighting with each other, and I don't even know for sure if they are the same species or not. And it just gets weirder from there.
From page 22:
If you like science fiction, especially the space opera type, and you're looking for something new and different, consider this one. I'm only halfway done, so I haven't decided yet how I feel about this.
This is a VERY weird book, quite unlike any other science fiction I've read. It took about 100 pages for me to finally decide I liked it; before then, I was just so disoriented, I didn't know what to think of it. To start with, the main character has amnesia (and she has had amnesia "hundreds of times" before), so you have no idea what is happening, what has happened before, who she can trust, or what the people around her might be planning. And then on top of that, it's set in a very odd world, somewhere in outer space, where people live inside creatures that are sort of planets and sort of spaceships. There are different, uh, nationalities, they are fighting with each other, and I don't even know for sure if they are the same species or not. And it just gets weirder from there.
From page 22:
“Won’t I fall off?” I ask, pointing at the sleek tube of the open vehicle. Neither the vehicle nor the bulb containing my supposed suit looks particularly safe. I have an idea of what an airless vacuum of space is, which is odd. I can understand things like food and furniture and heat, but not who I am, or where we are, or why I dream of cannibal women cutting themselves open.
If you like science fiction, especially the space opera type, and you're looking for something new and different, consider this one. I'm only halfway done, so I haven't decided yet how I feel about this.

I love Sarah Pinborough's fairy tale re-tellings (I read them for the 2015 challenge) so I might have to give this one a go. Thanks for the recommendation







Kristin wrote: "Some people said 'Girl on the Train'. I just read it though, so does anyone know of her new book 'Into the Water' will count too?"
I don't think it does. I'm about to read it next, so in a week or two I'll be able to say for sure.
I don't think it does. I'm about to read it next, so in a week or two I'll be able to say for sure.



Rachel wrote: "Would The Woman in Cabin 10 count? I saw it on a list for books with unreliable narrators, but it was only shelved that way a few times, so I'm not sure."
She was reliable, she relayed the facts in front of her, she just didn't have all the facts. Other people on the boat doubted her and thought she was unreliable, but I don't think she was an unreliable narrator. But I think some other people have used this book for this category, so I seem to have different definitions than what other people use for these categories.
She was reliable, she relayed the facts in front of her, she just didn't have all the facts. Other people on the boat doubted her and thought she was unreliable, but I don't think she was an unreliable narrator. But I think some other people have used this book for this category, so I seem to have different definitions than what other people use for these categories.
No, the narrators in AtUaWT are reliable. It definitely does not work for this category. It could fit "a difficult topic" though.

I like ..."
I'm reading A Million Little Pieces based on your comment :-)

The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time
Another one could be All the Ugly and Wonderful Things despite having multiple narrators because one of them is the main character and does also have a unique way of viewing her situation.
All the Ugly and Wonderful Things

That book is currently on my TBR list!

Books mentioned in this topic
Slaughterhouse-Five (other topics)The Good Girl (other topics)
And Every Morning the Way Home Gets Longer and Longer (other topics)
See What I Have Done (other topics)
Attachments (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Rainbow Rowell (other topics)Sarah Pinborough (other topics)
Kameron Hurley (other topics)
Margaret Atwood (other topics)
Jami Attenberg (other topics)
More...