From "Letters of Note", a most worthwhile time waster of a site (and also now a book, too) |
So just what is an epistolary novel? It’s a story told using documents such as diary entries, letters, emails, text messages, newspaper articles, web pages, scribbled notes, marginalia, pretty much any other kind of evidence you might imagine that could be strung into a narrative. One might suppose that with kids these days and the death of handwriting so goes the epistolary as well. Not so! There are a TON of these out there, some better than others, many capitalizing on zeitgeist to propel the narrative. Take for instance the Lauren Myracle series of YA books so popular a few years ago, ttyl, which was written in the form of online instant messenger conversations. And who was it that mused that the great American novel would be written on a cellphone? I personally would LOVE to see a novel written entirely in the form of incendiary YouTube comments or in a drama unfolding on Facebook. How about a novel about minor celebrity and major egos told entirely through Wikipedia article edits and the ensuing flame war on the talk pages?! Could somebody please hurry up and write that? Maybe I should...hmm.
Well, moving on:
Gorgeous, powerful, moving, best book of the year, The Blazing World has a permanent home on the "Staff Picks" shelf at Ginter Park (unless it's checked out of course). Assembled from diary entries, articles, interviews, and correspondence, the book appears to be the research project of an art historian investigating the life and career of artist Harriet Burden. It's poignant, humane, deeply insightful, and absolutely wonderful.
Dear Committee Members is a petite novel composed entirely of academic letters of reference from a brutally honest professor of creative writing who is overburdened with having to write so many letters. This slyly sensitive book is almost unbearably funny. I nearly choked to death reading this on my lunch break. If you are an academic, or love an academic, or are someone frustrated with the realities of today's academic landscape, job market, or some combination of all of the above, this will hit especially close to home.
Told through transcribed interviews conducted by the author, Jesse Ball, Silence Once Begun is a journalist's investigation into the "Narito Disappearances", a baffling crime with an equally baffling confessor at its center. While at times the epistolary device bordered on gimmicky, the story was so compelling one can easily forgive a little awkward construction.
Some well-known epistolary novels to consider:
Carrie by Stephen King
- letters, excerpts, clippings, articles
- diary
- beautifully illustrated correspondence
- correspondence
- letters to an anonymous stranger
- duh, diary
Flowers for Algernon by Daniel Keyes
- laboratory progress reports written by the declining subject (Oh! The tears!)
The Color Purple by Alice Walker
- letters to God
Super Sad True Love Story by Gary Shteyngart
- diary entries and email
We Need to Talk About Kevin by Lionel Shriver
- letters
ttyl, ttfn, and l8r, g8r, by Lauren Myracle
Got a favorite? Add it in the comments!
Yours truly,
Natalie
*P.S.
Go Ask Alice is perhaps the one that hooked me. It is the over-the-top melodramatic "found" diary of a teenage girl spiraling out of control in a miasma of sex and drugs. It's a pretty wild trip and I totally bought that it was a real diary.
- chat room style dialogue
- correspondence
- One long letter
Got a favorite? Add it in the comments!
Yours truly,
Natalie
*P.S.
Go Ask Alice is perhaps the one that hooked me. It is the over-the-top melodramatic "found" diary of a teenage girl spiraling out of control in a miasma of sex and drugs. It's a pretty wild trip and I totally bought that it was a real diary.
5 comments:
I’ll freely admit to loving _Fair and Tender Ladies_, _Clarissa_ and _Pamela_, just to name a few.
Love this list! Do read "Ella Minnow Pea", by Mark Dunn (2001).
And does your favorite of last year, Night Film, qualify as epistolary?
I nearly added Night Film but left it off for some reason. Same for Lovers at the Chameleon Club. Also absent is World War Z--I suppose it qualifies too.
My favorite is The Lover's Dictionary by David Levithan. It's a short and easy read in its format. But I love the story it illustrates with each entry about love and a relationship once rich gone sour.
Post a Comment