Around the Year in 52 Books discussion
Weekly Topics 2018
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15: A book with an unique format/writing structure
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- What are you reading for this category?
The Obelisk Gate by N.K. Jemisin
- What makes the format unique?
This book isn't as out of the box as others on this list, but its narration is interesting as it bounces back and forth in time and perspective, with chapters by different people, some written in first person and some written in second person.

Here's my review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
P.S. Highly recommend Dept. of Speculation for this prompt as well. One of my favourite books from last year, it's infinitely quotable and just amazing!

Lab Girl by Hope Jahren
- What makes the format unique?
The chapters change between memoirs and plant biology.

I am reading Fight Club 2 by Chuck Palahniuk
- What makes the format unique?
It isn't that this is a graphic novel, or an adaptation, but the use of metafictional elements and the breaking of some graphic novel conventions in telling the story strike me as innovative.

It's told in journal entries with e-mails and "voice" recordings

Just curious- have any of you finished it yet? Did you read it the way other people recommend or all at once?
I was going to read it as recommended following the color coded notes, but having picked it up from the library I don't think I'll have the time and I'm reading it all in one go.
Sarah, you may want to visit the dedicated book topic for more in-depth discussion of specific books: https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...

Thanks Laura! Didn't realize there was a thread.



It’s quite unique in that it has two parallel stories occurring - one through the actual book, Ship of Theseus, and the other through detailed notes between two people in the margins, as well as through actual letters, nrespaper articles and other items that are strategically placed throughout the book. It looks stunning.


It is unique because it was published in a serial format!
It was very interesting based on the premise that fairy tales try to keep encroaching into reality and there is a government agency consisting of fairy tale characters that fight to keep them from causing harm.
Super fun to read if you love fairytales.


Our Gang by Philip Roth
It's a political satire.
- What makes the format unique?
It's a closet drama -- a play not meant to be performed. Does this count as a unique format? I think this is the first closet drama I've read, so it's unique to me.

Invisible Cities by Italo Calvino (Conversations between Marco Polo and Kublai Khan are interspersed with description of Marco's travel in a prose poetry style)
Reader’s Block by David Markson (Trivia, famous quotes, and anecdotes intermixed with the thoughts of an aging author who contemplates writing a novel)
Gilead by Marilynne Robinson (written in the form of a memoir/letter to the main character's son to read after he dies)
Time's Arrow by Martin Amis (the story starts at the end of the main character's life and everything occurs backwards)





I finally finished S. Ship of Theseus. What a project!
- What makes the format unique?
The main story was two students writing notes back and forth within the margin of the novel, along with inserts of letters, postcards, newspaper clippings etc.
I mostly read it because my husband was gifted it so we already owned a copy. My choices were this or Only Revolutions which I had already attempted and DNFed a while ago. (I'd already read House of Leaves). I wanted to go with something I already owned, since a lot of these odd formatting ones really need to be experienced in paper, not digitally. Also with S I can't imagine a library trying to keep it in circulation with all the inserts. Plus the fact that it already has library markings on it as part of the story, and is already scribbled all over, it'd be horrible if some rando started writing their own notes, haha.

I finally finished S. Ship of Theseus. What a project!
- What makes the format unique?
The main story was two students writing notes back ..."
Its such beautiful book to own!! I had to go out and buy a copy as soon as I heard about it, because it sounded so interesting, but all of the maps and inserts and the box its stored in .... I just love it. Hopefully I can find somewhere to fit it in next year. It would have been so perfect for this prompt, but I just didn't think I'd have the time to finish it.
LOL... I wonder if the libraries do carry it, and how they manage to keep track of all the extras? And that would be freaking hilarious if everyone started just added their own notes in the margins 😂. Could you even imagine??

The production values of the book are lovely. I was showing my husband how there was a map insert. A map of a fictional school. Printed on an actual napkin...from a fictional coffeeshop with a fictional logo. Also the copy of a newspaper from a fictional school...on actual newsprint. With logos designed for the fictional school and the fictional newspaper, and fake stories written to fill out the rest of the page and the back of the paper. Also, I'm pretty familiar with hand writing fonts, I'm a graphic designer. I'm reasonably certain the book was written by having actual people go through and scribble all over it.

The production values of..."
I know, I just feel like all book lovers should have it on their shelf 😊
Now I want to go pull my copy out and look at it all.
Haha I got all upset once because someone was looking at my copy and then lost the page where a postcard went. I was so pissed. I think I had to look up online where all the inserts go to put it back in the right spot.
Never. Again. Thats one book I will never let anyone borrow. And it was expensive lol.

But yeah, not lending it to anyone haha.


I have no idea how Im going to read it when I get around to it. Everyone is reading it differently. I posted a website that kinda walks you through...
Message #21 here in this thread.



Isn't it beautiful?? I just love it. I almost don't want to read it because I want to keep it pristine, if that even makes any sense. Enjoy it Liz
:-)
I checked my library just out of curiosity and they have 3 copies, all of which are currently available. Not sure I would want to get it from them since it could be a mess but I just wanted to see if they had it.




All the Missing Girls is written in a backwards timeline
Bridget Jones's Diary (all of them actually) are all written in dairy entries
Suzanne's Diary for Nicholas and Sam's Letters to Jennifer
Dear Fahrenheit 451: Love and Heartbreak in the Stacks: A Librarian's Love Letters and Breakup Notes to the Books in Her Life


I read A Tale for the Time Being by Ruth Ozeki
- What makes the format unique?
Most of the book is a diary written by a Japanese teenager and found by a woman living on an island in Canada. While the double narrative is not that unique anymore, the diary element I hope qualifies.


This looks cute for my daughter, I'll have to find it for her :-)
I have found several books ( not poetry ) written in verse this year, among them Forget Me Not and Inside Out & Back Again, I quite like the idea.

- What makes the format unique? It's really fun. It has chat logs, emails, classified documents, etc. I don't know why it took me so long to pick this one up. Perhaps I knew I'd be into it and want to read the other two in the series right away and I know they won't fit in my challenge at this point.

The funniest thing happened here Helen. Literally the DAY AFTER you posted this and I responded , my daughter brought it home from the school library. she enjoyed it. I didn't get a chance to read it before she brought it back though. It was the strangest coincidence ever.

For our picture book challenge we all read Journey, what a fantastic book. My daughters absolutely loved it and we immediately had to read the sequel,Quest ( I'm going to have to buy the third and final book Return next, so we have the whole collection). It reminds me of Harold and the Purple Crayon but better, more beautiful, and fantasy. The story is told with no text, pictures only, so that is unique. And wonderful. Each of the girls took turns "reading" the pictures, and we got two amazingly creative stories out of each book. Gorgeous!!


Books mentioned in this topic
Ella Minnow Pea: A Novel in Letters (other topics)Baking With Kafka (other topics)
Journey (other topics)
Attack of the Zittens (other topics)
Quest (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Ruth Ozeki (other topics)Nicholson Baker (other topics)
Chuck Palahniuk (other topics)
Hope Jahren (other topics)
N.K. Jemisin (other topics)
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Texts from Jane Eyre: And Other Conversations with Your Favorite Literary Characters
What makes the format unique?
It's a bunch of text conversations between various literary characters.