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Like anything else it is good when done right random thoughts Send a noteboard - 15/03/2010 10:32:48 PM
Or reading?

But I digress. Which leads me back to my original point!

I've just started reading Gene Wolfe's Soldier in the Mist. The narrator, a Latin mercenary in the army of the late Cyrus the Younger, has short term memory loss. Think Memento meets the Anabasis, except that Memento came later and the Anabasis is arguably more obscure.

ANYWAY. The point is that, as in Memento, people who can't remember anything typically don't make for particularly reliable narrators. Even when they write/tattoo/condition everything as best they can. Now, Gene Wolfe seems to enjoy playing with the concept of reliability in narration; the narrator of his Book of the New Sun claims to have an eidetic memory, but several things within the book go against this claim.

It strikes me that the majority of genre fiction I've read does not deal a lot with this concept. Sci-fi and fantasy in particular. There seems to be a pretty strong belief that whatever is written is a true account, which is really rather odd considering how fairly cynical we humans can be as readers. I think it's safe to say that, on the whole, realistic fiction is more open about the possibility of the narrator misconstruing something. I don't mean in the sense of "Oh, we thought Xandar the Dark was on our side, but actually he was betraying us!", but rather in the sense of a narrator misremembering a scene or looking at an event and misinterpreting what's going on. Which leads me to my general questions.

1. Do you go into a novel with the assumption that the narrator will be reliable? Why?


I am less inclined to trust the narrator when it is first person but in general in really depends on tone.

2. Do you actively assess a narrator's reliability? Do you do it often? Are there triggers that make you stop and judge the narrator's reliability?


I normally don't think about unless there is a reason to. If the narrator in the story is a character or seems to be one then I become a little more suspicious.

3. Do you prefer books with unreliable narrators? Why?


I prefer that are well written with believable characters and plots.

Feel free to hijack this into a discussion on reliability vs. unreliability, a critique on the concept of "realistic" vs "fantastic" fiction with regards to narrators' reliability (I'm looking at you, Larry), implicit misogyny in the assumption of certain narrative archetypes, etc.


to tired for that

(Or how horses can type with hooves, because I am pretty seriously sure that they can't. Unless they have, like, MEGA big keyboards.)

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Unreliable narrators: yay or nay? Or neigh? And if so, and you are a horse, how are you typing? - 12/03/2010 05:20:09 AM 777 Views
Re: Unreliable narrators: yay or nay? Or neigh? And if so, and you are a horse, how are you typing? - 12/03/2010 09:12:23 AM 594 Views
I enjoyed reading the Bayard. - 12/03/2010 11:55:09 PM 532 Views
Re: I enjoyed reading the Bayard. - 14/03/2010 10:56:54 AM 595 Views
Re: I enjoyed reading the Bayard. - 16/03/2010 10:37:35 PM 566 Views
Re: I enjoyed reading the Bayard. - 16/03/2010 10:39:13 PM 554 Views
Yes. - 17/03/2010 05:01:31 PM 591 Views
Re: Yes. - 17/03/2010 07:53:38 PM 481 Views
I don't mind either way. - 12/03/2010 10:18:03 AM 584 Views
Your face is an unreliable horse! - 12/03/2010 10:25:32 AM 587 Views
I think it's fairly logical that genre fiction doesn't employ it as often. - 12/03/2010 01:21:06 PM 751 Views
Well, isn't Erikson notable for his unreliable POVs? - 14/03/2010 12:57:25 AM 581 Views
Hm. Yeigh? - 12/03/2010 05:15:41 PM 647 Views
I like it when they are well written - 15/03/2010 08:44:02 AM 781 Views
Like anything else it is good when done right - 15/03/2010 10:32:48 PM 662 Views
I think because of our cynical nature - 19/03/2010 06:58:05 AM 553 Views

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