Fiction writers are continually confronted with choices as to which of any number of alternative plotlines to go with at any given point in a story. In Days With Diam Or: Life at Night Svend Åge Madsen has accepted the challenge of not making definitive plot choices but, rather, allowing several interwoven storylines to proceed whereby, at the end of each chapter, the narrative splits and continues along two alternate paths as illustrated in a flowchart which is the book's table of contents. The idea is to illustrate a conception of life as a multiplicity of potential selves contained in each of us and realized according to what choices we make at every instant of our lives.
The result is quite fascinating and not at all gimmicky as might, at first, be suggested by such a didactic narrative strategy. The different variations of each storyline are further varied into a diversity of stylistic modes from straight realism to pure fantasy to a non-fictional discussion of the theory behind the book. In one variation, the narrator's love interest, Diam, in addition, undergoes a variety of tranformations of character and appearance. The narrator's thoughts, (it's all in 1st person), and the details of the proliferating story variations are continually reflecting, in some very creative and stimulating ways, the theme of the multiplicity of the self.
It's all thoroughly engrossing and I highly reccommend it.