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Fiction_L Archives
Experimental Fiction
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FROM: "Jennifer Crenshaw" <[removed]@hotmail.com>
REC'D: 4/22/02, 2:17 PM
Griffin and Sabine series by Bantock
This Is Not a Novel by Markson
House of Leaves by Danielewski
Ella Minnow Pea by Dunn
Ringing for You by Grouse
Naked Came the Manatee by Hiassen et al
Natural Suspect by Bernhardt et al
Green Mile by King
If you know of others please let me know.
Thanks,
Jennifer L. Crenshaw
Pickens County Library System
_________________________________________________________________
MSN Photos is the easiest way to share and print your photos:
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FROM: "Smith, Jeff" <[removed]@marshall.usc.edu>
REC'D: 4/22/02, 2:17 PM
Jeff Smith
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Jennifer Crenshaw [[removed]@hotmail.com]
>Sent: Monday, April 22, 2002 12:02 PM
>To: Fiction_L
>Subject: Experimental Fiction
>
>
>I am compiling a list of "experimental" fiction titles -- ones
>in which the
>writer has played with the form. We ran a thread a few months ago on
>unusual fiction, but that played more to content. So far I've
>included:
>
>Griffin and Sabine series by Bantock
>This Is Not a Novel by Markson
>House of Leaves by Danielewski
>Ella Minnow Pea by Dunn
>Ringing for You by Grouse
>Naked Came the Manatee by Hiassen et al
>Natural Suspect by Bernhardt et al
>Green Mile by King
>
>If you know of others please let me know.
>
>Thanks,
>
>Jennifer L. Crenshaw
>Pickens County Library System
>
>
>_________________________________________________________________
>MSN Photos is the easiest way to share and print your photos:
>http://photos.msn.com/support/worldwide.aspx
>
>
>......................................................................
>Need to subscribe, unsubscribe, search the archives?
>Everything Fiction_L: http://www.webrary.org/rs/flmenu.html
>
FROM: "Maureen OConnor" <[removed]@bramlib.on.ca>
REC'D: 4/22/02, 2:28 PM
Maureen
"Never apologize for your reading tastes." Rosenberg
____________________________________________
Maureen O'Connor
Brampton Public Library
[removed]@bramlib.on.ca
All opinions expressed above are mine alone.
FROM: "Keri James" <[removed]@oppl.org>
REC'D: 4/22/02, 2:28 PM
Keri James
Reference Librarian
Oak Park Public Library
Jennifer Crenshaw wrote:
> I am compiling a list of "experimental" fiction titles -- ones in which the
> writer has played with the form. We ran a thread a few months ago on
> unusual fiction, but that played more to content. So far I've included:
>
> Griffin and Sabine series by Bantock
> This Is Not a Novel by Markson
> House of Leaves by Danielewski
> Ella Minnow Pea by Dunn
> Ringing for You by Grouse
> Naked Came the Manatee by Hiassen et al
> Natural Suspect by Bernhardt et al
> Green Mile by King
>
> If you know of others please let me know.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Jennifer L. Crenshaw
> Pickens County Library System
>
> _________________________________________________________________
> MSN Photos is the easiest way to share and print your photos:
> http://photos.msn.com/support/worldwide.aspx
>
> ......................................................................
> Need to subscribe, unsubscribe, search the archives?
> Everything Fiction_L: http://www.webrary.org/rs/flmenu.html
FROM: "Joy Tofteland" <[removed]@ankeny.k12.ia.us>
REC'D: 4/22/02, 2:39 PM
Maus : A Survivor's Tale
by Art Spiegelman
The format is like a comic book (cats and mice) but the subject matter is
the holocaust.
Joy Tofteland
Reference/ Technical Resources Librarian
Kirkendall Public Library
Ankeny, IA
FROM: Kathy Mitchum <[removed]@ckls.org>
REC'D: 4/22/02, 3:00 PM
At 03:21 PM 4/22/2002 -0400, Maureen OConnor wrote:
>Jennifer, if you're looking for others like the Hiassen title--a "serial
novel," you can try Naked Came the Phoenix by Marcia Talley. It's a fun read
for what it is.
>
>Maureen
>
>"Never apologize for your reading tastes." Rosenberg
>____________________________________________
>
>Maureen O'Connor
>Brampton Public Library
[removed]@bramlib.on.ca
>
>All opinions expressed above are mine alone.
>
>......................................................................
>Need to subscribe, unsubscribe, search the archives?
>Everything Fiction_L:
<http://www.webrary.org/rs/flmenu.html>http://www.webrary.org/rs/flmenu.html
>
Kathy Mitchum
ILL/Ref/Rural Serv/Tech Serv, Dept. Head
Central Kansas Library System
1409 Williams
Great Bend, KS 67530
(620-792-4865) phone
(620-792-5495) fax
[removed]@ckls.org
FROM: Dennis Lien <[removed]@tc.umn.edu>
REC'D: 4/22/02, 3:00 PM
Another "choose your own adventure" style for adults is LIFE'S
LOTTERY by Kim Newman (published only in England so far, though).
A google search for "experimental fiction" will turn up scads
of hits, most of which make my eyes glaze over immediately. Here's
a site with a lot of links, mostly to hypertext fiction
http://www.freeranger.com/chris/MM2.htm
Dennis Lien / U of Minnesota Libraries // [removed]@tc.umn.edu
FROM: Barry Trott <[removed]@mail.wrl.org>
REC'D: 4/22/02, 3:00 PM
Italo Calvino -- If on a winter's night a traveller
GIlbert Sorenntino -- Imaginative qualities of actual things
Barry
*******************************************************************************
Barry Trott 7770 Croaker Rd.
Adult Services Director Williamsburg VA 23188
Williamsburg Regional Library Phone: 757-259-4053
[removed]@mail.wrl.org FAX: 757-259-4079
http://www.wrl.org/bookweb/
*******************************************************************************
On Mon, 22 Apr 2002, Smith, Jeff wrote:
>
> Nicholson Baker's "VOX" is a novel consisting entirely of a single phone
> conversation. Is that the kind of thing you would count as "experimental"?
>
> Jeff Smith
>
> >-----Original Message-----
> >From: Jennifer Crenshaw [[removed]@hotmail.com]
> >Sent: Monday, April 22, 2002 12:02 PM
> >To: Fiction_L
> >Subject: Experimental Fiction
> >
> >
> >I am compiling a list of "experimental" fiction titles -- ones
> >in which the
> >writer has played with the form. We ran a thread a few months ago on
> >unusual fiction, but that played more to content. So far I've
> >included:
> >
> >Griffin and Sabine series by Bantock
> >This Is Not a Novel by Markson
> >House of Leaves by Danielewski
> >Ella Minnow Pea by Dunn
> >Ringing for You by Grouse
> >Naked Came the Manatee by Hiassen et al
> >Natural Suspect by Bernhardt et al
> >Green Mile by King
> >
> >If you know of others please let me know.
> >
> >Thanks,
> >
> >Jennifer L. Crenshaw
> >Pickens County Library System
> >
> >
> >_________________________________________________________________
> >MSN Photos is the easiest way to share and print your photos:
> >http://photos.msn.com/support/worldwide.aspx
> >
> >
> >......................................................................
> >Need to subscribe, unsubscribe, search the archives?
> >Everything Fiction_L: http://www.webrary.org/rs/flmenu.html
> >
>
> ......................................................................
> Need to subscribe, unsubscribe, search the archives?
> Everything Fiction_L: http://www.webrary.org/rs/flmenu.html
>
FROM: [removed]@carmel.lib.in.us (Mary Boyden)
REC'D: 4/22/02, 3:11 PM
Mary Boyden
Readers' Advisory Librarian
Carmel Clay Public Library
At 03:02 PM 4/22/02 -0400, you wrote:
>I am compiling a list of "experimental" fiction titles -- ones in which the
>writer has played with the form. We ran a thread a few months ago on
>unusual fiction, but that played more to content. So far I've included:
>
>Griffin and Sabine series by Bantock
>This Is Not a Novel by Markson
>House of Leaves by Danielewski
>Ella Minnow Pea by Dunn
>Ringing for You by Grouse
>Naked Came the Manatee by Hiassen et al
>Natural Suspect by Bernhardt et al
>Green Mile by King
>
>If you know of others please let me know.
>
>Thanks,
>
>Jennifer L. Crenshaw
>Pickens County Library System
>
>
>_________________________________________________________________
>MSN Photos is the easiest way to share and print your photos:
>http://photos.msn.com/support/worldwide.aspx
>
>
>......................................................................
>Need to subscribe, unsubscribe, search the archives?
>Everything Fiction_L: http://www.webrary.org/rs/flmenu.html
>
FROM: "Quillen, Christine" <[removed]@camden.lib.nj.us>
REC'D: 4/22/02, 3:11 PM
-----Original Message-----
From: Keri James [[removed]@oppl.org]
Sent: Monday, April 22, 2002 3:25 PM
To: Fiction_L
Subject: Re: Experimental Fiction
253: The Print Remix by Geoff Ryman was originally published on the web and
is
similar to the "Choose your own adventure" books, except for adults. Each
"chapter" is exactly 253 words. A review of the work can be found in
Library
Journal, Sept. 15, 1998 by Andrea Caron Kempf.
Keri James
Reference Librarian
Oak Park Public Library
Jennifer Crenshaw wrote:
> I am compiling a list of "experimental" fiction titles -- ones in which
the
> writer has played with the form. We ran a thread a few months ago on
> unusual fiction, but that played more to content. So far I've included:
>
> Griffin and Sabine series by Bantock
> This Is Not a Novel by Markson
> House of Leaves by Danielewski
> Ella Minnow Pea by Dunn
> Ringing for You by Grouse
> Naked Came the Manatee by Hiassen et al
> Natural Suspect by Bernhardt et al
> Green Mile by King
>
> If you know of others please let me know.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Jennifer L. Crenshaw
> Pickens County Library System
>
> _________________________________________________________________
> MSN Photos is the easiest way to share and print your photos:
> http://photos.msn.com/support/worldwide.aspx
>
> ......................................................................
> Need to subscribe, unsubscribe, search the archives?
> Everything Fiction_L: http://www.webrary.org/rs/flmenu.html
FROM: "Margaret Mallett" <[removed]@itpld.lib.il.us>
REC'D: 4/22/02, 3:43 PM
Margaret Mallett, Reference Librarian
IndianTrails Public Library
355 So. Schoenbeck Road
Wheeling IL 60090
[removed]@itpld.lib.il.us
FROM: "BookBitch" <[removed]@yahoo.com>
REC'D: 4/22/02, 4:15 PM
Kentuckiana by Johnny Payne - metafiction
Last Days of Summer by Steve Kluge - An epistolary novel with a twist; the
narrative moves along via letters as well as matchbook covers, news
clippings, report cards, telegrams, etc.
Lydia Cassatt Reading the Morning Paper by Harriet Scott Chessman - color
plates of each Cassatt painting that is "novelized", for lack of a better
word.
It's My F---ing Birthday by Merrill Markoe - each chapter celebrates another
birthday and includes a New Year's resolution
Family Orchard by Nomi Eve - each chapter includes snippets of the author's
father's journal, along with her fictionalized story expanding on the
journal entry.
Hope this is what you are looking for...
Stacy Alesi
Southwest County Regional Library
Palm Beach County Library System
I am the BookBitch
www.bookbitch.com
-----Original Message-----
From: [removed]@maillist.webrary.org
[[removed]@maillist.webrary.org]On Behalf Of Jennifer Crenshaw
Sent: Monday, April 22, 2002 3:02 PM
To: Fiction_L
Subject: Experimental Fiction
I am compiling a list of "experimental" fiction titles -- ones in which the
writer has played with the form. We ran a thread a few months ago on
unusual fiction, but that played more to content. So far I've included:
Griffin and Sabine series by Bantock
This Is Not a Novel by Markson
House of Leaves by Danielewski
Ella Minnow Pea by Dunn
Ringing for You by Grouse
Naked Came the Manatee by Hiassen et al
Natural Suspect by Bernhardt et al
Green Mile by King
If you know of others please let me know.
Thanks,
Jennifer L. Crenshaw
Pickens County Library System
_________________________________________________________________
MSN Photos is the easiest way to share and print your photos:
http://photos.msn.com/support/worldwide.aspx
FROM: Theresa <[removed]@pelican.state.lib.la.us>
REC'D: 4/22/02, 5:18 PM
Theresa Thevenote 318-253-7559
Avoyelles Parish Library http://www.avoyelles.lib.la.us
104 N Washington
Marksville LA 71351
>Subject: RE: Experimental Fiction
>From: "Barry Trott" <[removed]@mail.wrl.org>
>Date: Mon, 22 Apr 2002 15:56:55 -0400 (EDT)
>
>Georges Perec -- The Disappearance (written without using the letter "e");
>Life: a user's manual ("a minute description of all the objects and events
>in a ten-story apartment building at 11 rue Simon-Crubellier, Paris XVII,
>at a particular moment, just before 8 p.m. on June 23, 1975")
>
>Italo Calvino -- If on a winter's night a traveller
>
>GIlbert Sorenntino -- Imaginative qualities of actual things
>
>Barry
>
>
>***************************************************************************
****
>Barry Trott 7770 Croaker Rd.
>Adult Services Director Williamsburg VA 23188
>Williamsburg Regional Library Phone: 757-259-4053
[removed]@mail.wrl.org FAX: 757-259-4079
> http://www.wrl.org/bookweb/
FROM: "Madeline Guzman" <[removed]@hotmail.com>
REC'D: 4/23/02, 12:25 AM
The Black Box by Amos Oz (in which he tells his story through a series of
letters)
Madeline G
patron, Twinbrook Library
Montgomery County, MD
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FROM: "Karen A.K. Keller" <[removed]@brighton.lib.mi.us>
REC'D: 4/23/02, 7:39 AM
Karen Keller
Brighton (MI) District Library
FROM: Katherine Johnson <[removed]@epexchange.epnet.com>
REC'D: 4/23/02, 8:33 AM
I believe there are other tours-de-force omitting various letters of the
alphabet throughout. Douglas Hofstadter discusses this kind of
linguistic experimentation; I believe it's in "Le Ton Beau de Marot: In
Praise of the Music of Language" where he mentions "A Void" and some
other experimental works. I don't have my copy to hand, so I'm not
completely sure I didn't read about these somewhere else.
Depending what one means by "experimental," one might also include "The
Rings of Saturn" by the late W.G. Sebald. If interested in
completeness, one should include Dada works, but my aging memory will
not retrieve any examples which are novels. There's also Raymond
Queneau's "Zazie in the Metro" ("Zazie dans le metro"). There are also
prose works by Samuel Beckett, who wrote in French BECAUSE it was not
his native language -- "Malone Dies" is a novel (translated by the
author from French to English).
Of course, something that was experimental when it was first published
may have been absorbed into the mainstream by now. Wilkie Collins' "The
Moonstone" was an early, if not the first, use of the technique of
presenting the story from the point of view of various characters, none
of whom knew all the facts. This is now a typical narrative technique.
Stop me now before I revert entirely to my undergraduate days!
--
Katherine Bradley Johnson
NoveList Database Specialist
NoveList/EBSCO
[removed]@epnet.com
2634 Chapel Hill Blvd., Ste. 208
Durham, NC 27707-2830 USA
(919) 489-9412 x206 (voice)
(919) 489-7263 (fax)
Die Welt des Märchens ist die, der Welt der Wahrheit
durchaus entgegengesetzte und eben darum ihr so
durchaus ähnlich, wie das Chaos der vollendeten
Schöpfung ähnlich ist." -- NOVALIS.
FROM: Cynthia Orr <[removed]@cpl.org>
REC'D: 4/23/02, 8:33 AM
Alphabetical Africa by Walter Abish:
Chapter 1 is composed with words beginning only with the letter A, Chapter 2
with A and B and so on until chapter 27, when Z first, then chapter by
chapter all other letters, are progressively subtracted.
and
Gadsby, A Story of Over 50,000 Words Without Using the Letter "E" by Ernest
Vincent Wright:
a novel written in 1939 and is now available in full text online:
http://gadsby.hypermart.net/
La Disparition (A Void) by Georges Perect also omits the letter E.
Eunoia by Christian Bok allows the use of only one vowel in each chapter.
There's also the Journal of Experimental Fiction:
http://www.experimentalfiction.com/
---
Cynthia Orr
Collection Manager
Cleveland Public Library
17133 Lake Shore Boulevard
Cleveland, OH 44110
(216) 623-2906
Fax - (216)623-2977
www.cpl.org
FROM: "Quillen, Christine" <[removed]@camden.lib.nj.us>
REC'D: 4/23/02, 3:52 PM
C. L.
-----Original Message-----
From: Jennifer Crenshaw [[removed]@hotmail.com]
Sent: Monday, April 22, 2002 3:02 PM
To: Fiction_L
Subject: Experimental Fiction
I am compiling a list of "experimental" fiction titles -- ones in which the
writer has played with the form. We ran a thread a few months ago on
unusual fiction, but that played more to content. So far I've included:
Griffin and Sabine series by Bantock
This Is Not a Novel by Markson
House of Leaves by Danielewski
Ella Minnow Pea by Dunn
Ringing for You by Grouse
Naked Came the Manatee by Hiassen et al
Natural Suspect by Bernhardt et al
Green Mile by King
If you know of others please let me know.
Thanks,
Jennifer L. Crenshaw
Pickens County Library System
_________________________________________________________________
MSN Photos is the easiest way to share and print your photos:
http://photos.msn.com/support/worldwide.aspx
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