Reading with Style discussion
note: This topic has been closed to new comments.
Archives
>
FA 19 20.5 Non-Linear
date
newest »


Nonlinear narrative, disjointed narrative or disrupted narrative is a narrative technique, sometimes used in literature, film, hypertext websites and other narratives, where events are portrayed, for example, out of chronological order or in other ways where the narrative does not follow the direct causality pattern of the events featured, such as parallel distinctive plot lines, dream immersions or narrating another story inside the main plot-line. It is often used to mimic the structure and recall of human memory, but has been applied for other reasons as well.Examples at Wikipedia.
Some GR members are uber-classifiers and there is a shelf Non Linear.
Also, here is a short article.
Please feel free to share your ideas for this task.


Thanks for the recommendation, Lynn!



Thanks, Karen! It’s hard to know sometimes from the book descriptions. In my new issue of Bookmarks magazine, there is a section where readers send a list of books the recommend. This time a reader sent in Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet and she states “I’ll admit I have a weakness for writers who tell stories that go back and forth in time”.


Is a work that takes place in two different eras simultaneously nonlinear? Like some of the stories with one person living in a house during this era and another during that era? It feels linear, but is sections of linearity put together by chapter, or some such.
I notice the task says "book" instead of novel, but collections of short stories, poetry, or nonfiction dont really seem to fit the spirit of the task (well, maybe a nonfiction memoir depnding on how it is told). What were you thinking about in regards to these not novels?

Is a work that takes place in two different eras simultaneously nonlinear?..."
Childhood flashbacks will make a work non-linear, so you'd be good with such books.
Books of short stories and poetry will not work. However, there are definitely nonfiction books that insert backstories in such a way to make the work nonlinear. You are not restricted to novels for this task.

Thanks for the recommendation, Lynn!"
You're welcome! Of course The Time Traveler's Wife is non-linear. I loved that book.

Thanks for the recommendation,..."
I did too!

What about The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo? The book is written in the first person with the journalist telling her story of interviewing Evelyn Hugo, the film star. Then there are pieces where we're seeing Evelyn's life, along with news articles and descriptions of photos at the time. Different story pieces eventually connect up.
It feels like maybe this fits, since it's using flashbacks to give the historical story, but maybe it doesn't because the journalist is learning these story pieces in real/chronological time.
Help?

What about The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo? The book is written in the first person with the journalist telling her story..."
Yay! Look what I found: "I love dying!! This is a nonlinear historical fiction narrative about a woman from old Hollywood and the love of her life!! ..."

as with much historical non-fiction that I've read, this one follows the events in chronological order, but the narrative itself jumps around to elucidate the topic using different events both from the past (including but not limited to: the experience of other shipwreck survivors from up to 50 years earlier, the original colonization of islands in the Pacific which happened hundreds of years earlier, the mutiny on the Bounty and their establishment of a community on Pitcairn) to the future (including a study of the effects of starvation on the human body conducted in the 1940s). There are more examples of the jumping around in time, but don't know if it would be enough to count as non-linear...


as with much historical non-fi..."
If it tells of other stories in prior years, comes back to the Essex, rinse repeat, then yes, it is definitely non-linear. I look forward to your review! And yours, too, Penny.

This is hilarious - I got a copy of this out of the library a week ago, in anticipation!

"In A Wild Sheep Chase, Murakami employs various non-linear narrative techniques that highlight the labyrinth." article (around middle of page)



That sounds exactly right!


From what I have seen, I am expecting it to work here, but am not positive yet.

Not at all, but it wasn’t like I had to go back and rewrite the book, since I don’t write linearly. My novels grow from a core center in every direction, until eventually that core disappears.
This will definitely work for this task.

In that case, Twelve Bar Blues will fit. It is the story of a people in Africa and several generations later in America. It moves back and forth between the two.


It's the type of NF book that doesn't have a narrative at all. Anecdotal accounts and information around particular subjects...
Wondering if this fits?

It's the type of NF book that doesn't have a narrative at all. Anecdotal accounts and information around particular subjects...
Wonde..."
Does the author seem to skip around as to time? This type of nonfiction seems to do so, but I haven't read this title.

But yes we definitely move through mid 1800's to present day and not in chronological order.

Then you should be good here!


Sorry, for missing this Rebekah. I didn't remember that there was any "non-linearness" to it, but I find some articles that say it is. You may claim it for this task.

Sorry, for missing this Rebekah. I didn't remember that there was any "non-linearness" to it, but I find some articles that say it..."
Thank you, Elizabeth. I’ve been getting side tracked by the real world a bit myself!
This topic has been frozen by the moderator. No new comments can be posted.
Books mentioned in this topic
Heart of Darkness (other topics)Heart of Darkness (other topics)
Heart of Darkness (other topics)
Heart of Darkness (other topics)
Outliers: The Story of Success (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Blake Crouch (other topics)James Martin (other topics)
James Martin (other topics)
Haruki Murakami (other topics)
Edgar Rice Burroughs (other topics)
More...
Please post any questions, comments, or suggestions for Task 20.5 in this thread.