I mentioned this in another thread about the POV in Less by Andrew Sean Greer and forgot to come back to it when I finished the book a while back. In the novel, there is a first person POV but only four or five "I-guy" references in the book until the end. You forget it's there for forty or fifty pages at a time and then a random "I" appears for no reason at all. The net effect is that the book reads as objective POV because we're never able to get inside the head of the protagonist, Arthur Less, who is in every scene. Yet the first person narrator, who is not personified, will offer observational opinions and thoughts about situations and other characters, but not from Arthur Less's perspective, which you would think would play wonky but does not.
I should add that it's a capital L literary novel that won a Pulitzer... one of those books where every bit of prose is so perfectly executed it's almost annoying.
Toward the very end it is revealed that the I-guy narrator is actually one of the recurring characters in the book, yet that character is framed as all the others are. It's like the narrator has been disembodied, is looking down on himself, and talking about himself objectively in the third person. "Incognito" (to even himself) is the only word to describe it. Or maybe "inverted." I've never seen anything like it before but it works perfectly.
I don't really have a question... just wanted to mention how messed up it is. I guess I would ask if anyone has seen anything like before? It would be like Watson narrating Sherlock Holmes but referring to himself as Watson in an objective POV with only an unrelated I-guy reference to remind us there was a first person narrator sitting somewhere, but never clueing us in that it's really Watson.
I should add that it's a capital L literary novel that won a Pulitzer... one of those books where every bit of prose is so perfectly executed it's almost annoying.
Toward the very end it is revealed that the I-guy narrator is actually one of the recurring characters in the book, yet that character is framed as all the others are. It's like the narrator has been disembodied, is looking down on himself, and talking about himself objectively in the third person. "Incognito" (to even himself) is the only word to describe it. Or maybe "inverted." I've never seen anything like it before but it works perfectly.
I don't really have a question... just wanted to mention how messed up it is. I guess I would ask if anyone has seen anything like before? It would be like Watson narrating Sherlock Holmes but referring to himself as Watson in an objective POV with only an unrelated I-guy reference to remind us there was a first person narrator sitting somewhere, but never clueing us in that it's really Watson.