What's the Name of That Book??? discussion
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Books told in unique formats - Any Genre or Age
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Psylk
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Dec 07, 2014 10:03PM

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Possession series
By Elana Johnson (sp?)
Overall I was not a huge fan of the books the author writing style changes with each book. If I remember right it is the second book where each chapter starts with the name of the person talking in this chapter. Good luck hope you find something you like.

Jitterbug Perfume past, present and future all mashed up together
Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children creepy old photos add to the ok story
Skinny Legs and All POV of a spoon and a can of soup


It is an epistolary format - all letters.

And The Body: An Essay by Jenny Boully is probably the most unique format of any work I have ever encountered. The 'story' is removed, and all that remains are the footnotes to a non-existent essay.
Also, a quick YA read would be ttyl by Lauren Myracle. It's not an unheard-of, totally unique story, but I was a teen in the early noughts so the all-IM format was familiar and, to me, captured the teen voices I remember.

Up the Down Staircase by Bel Kaufman
Shutter Island by Dennis Lehane
The Eight by Katherine Neville
The Plague Tales by Ann Benson

David Mitchell has written few books with an original structure - again, semi-connected short stories that span through past, present and future. Check Cloud Atlas and Ghostwritten.
The Raw Shark Texts and The End of Mr. Y both have a very original structure - but read as novels.
Flowers for Algernon is an old but good one. The structure is quite banal -a diary- but the story makes it more original. You should check it out.
Ella Minnow Pea is told through letters, but with a very original twist - I recommend it.
I really liked The Blind Assassin, which tells a story in a story through a third story. Great story, very interesting storytelling.
In Room the narrator is a little boy who does not really know what is happening. It's, however, a very good book.
Walter Moers's novels are extremely original, if you can get your hands on them I advise The 13½ Lives of Captain Bluebear, Rumo & His Miraculous Adventures and his best work, The City of Dreaming Books.

You may want to check out this listopia.
https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/3...
"Fictional tales told through letters, emails, diary entries, etc."
I'm reading one right now, Rites of Passage. Told via diary entries from a young man to his godfather as he travels from England to Australia in the early 19th century. Too soon to know if I would recommend the book, although Golding is a Nobel Prize winner.
https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/3...
"Fictional tales told through letters, emails, diary entries, etc."
I'm reading one right now, Rites of Passage. Told via diary entries from a young man to his godfather as he travels from England to Australia in the early 19th century. Too soon to know if I would recommend the book, although Golding is a Nobel Prize winner.
Evelina is great.
We Need to Talk About Kevin is told as a series of letters or diary entries from a wife to her husband.
We Need to Talk About Kevin is told as a series of letters or diary entries from a wife to her husband.
David Foster Wallace is known for his creative, postmodern ways of telling a story, both in his fiction and his nonfiction. I've read his short story collection Brief Interviews with Hideous Men.

One story is told in an epic poem and a second story is told in the footnotes by an extremely biased (insane?) editor.
House of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski.
There's the main text and two different narrators' stories via footnotes. And as the characters in the story have to twist and turn their way through a maze, you literally have to turn the book upside down, read mirror image text, etc. Also, if you're into puzzles there's lots of them in here.
Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell by Susanna Clarke is another one that used the footnote device - though a little more traditionally.


Edited to add: Not fiction. But you might look it up anyway, even if you don't read it.

The narrator of The Lovely Bones is dead.
Ellen Hopkins' books are told in verse.
A Trick of the Light is told from the perspective of an eating disorder.
In the tradition of Georges Perec (who wrote A Void), each story within Impossible Words: Reasonable Stories Born from Unreasonable Rules is written without using a given vowel.



The Golden Gate is written in verse. "...composed of 590 Onegin stanzas (sonnets written in iambic tetrameter, with the rhyme scheme following the ababccddeffegg pattern of Eugene Onegin). It was inspired by Charles Johnston's translation of Pushkin's Eugene Onegin." Wikipedia.
S. purports to be a battered library copy of another work. Postcards, maps, newspaper clippings are inserted. There is handwritten marginalia. Also an epistolary romance.


Many by David Wiesner would be great, I love Tuesday which has very few words. Also Black and White my David Macaulay is amazing, four stories told mostly in pictures merge into one ... maybe.


The Boy Meets Girl series is told completely in emails/texts/IMs, unlike the PD series, which only incorporates them. (I am so excited for book #11 of PD and book #7 of The Mediator!)



https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/2...
https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/2...
https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/1...


The Forgotten Garden uses multiple narrators and shifting timelines.
A Game of Thrones
The Invention of Hugo Cabret and Wonderstruck are told mostly through illustrations.
The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society is told through letters.

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The World Jones Made
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A Perfect Vacuum
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