Submitted by slowcancellation t3_11xc0jc in books
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Submitted by slowcancellation t3_11xc0jc in books
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Been on my to-read list for years but I've never found a reasonably priced copy - from what I know it's exactly what I'm looking for though!
Do it! Can probably find it used for a good price on thriftbooks maybe?
Definitely the first book that came to mind when I read your post.
Annihilation by Jeff VanderMeer (not entirely nonlinear but has flashbacks and includes LOTS of creepy). Also, as someone else already mentioned, House of Leaves.
Oh yeah, I loved Annihilation and it definitely fits into this theme!
I would say the other two books in the trilogy apply here even moreso. And Dead Astronauts, also by Vandermeer, is too out there for me to even give a straight answer as to whether it's non-linear or not. But it definitely gives you a jigsaw puzzle of a story.
Dead Astronauts definitely does something weird with time!
I’m thinking of ending things by Iain Reid might fit the bill for you! so might « build your house around my body » by violet kuoersmith.
full disclosure, i wasn’t familiar with quite a few of your references so i might miss the mark.
I'd definitely put film of I'm Thinking of Ending Things in this general category - I haven't read the book though because from what I could tell there wouldn't be much suspense to it if you knew where it was going. Hadn't heard of the Kupersmith one before now, but the "mysterious disappearances X years apart" subgenre usually has the feel I'm describing so I'm very intrigued!
The book is a lot better than the movie imo and definitely has more horror elements.
Use of Weapons by Iain M. Banks has two narratives going in opposite directions in time, with both culminating with the same climax.
Dhalgren by Samuel Delaney is a good scifi example of this.
Haven't read any Delany but this one sounds like exactly what I'm thinking of, I will definitely track this down
Dark places -Gillian Flynn
The Invention of Morel is a fun short one. Also check out Jorge Louis Borges (Labyrinths).
The Body Artist by Don DeLillo is great, not strictly non-linear but deals heavily in non-linearity of time.
I love Virginia Woolf and I way preferred The Waves to The Lighthouse if you haven't read that one.
The Post Office Girl by Stefan Zweig is one of my favourites and has a cool backdrop of subjective impending doom, along with Beware of Pity (aka Impatience of the Heart) by the same author.
The Third Policeman by Flan O’Brien. It’s a funny book, but there’s something ominous about it that sneaks up on you as you read.
The Prague Cemetery by Umberto Eco has a main character with Amnesia and alternate personalities remembering his past. It has a pretty creepy effect
Martin Amis, London Fields.
The Box Man by Kobo Abe
Perdido Street Station by China Mieville, a little more linear but very surrealistic
There Is No Antimemetics Division by qntm
My Education: A Book of Dreams by William S Burroughs.
The Unnamable by Samuel Beckett might do the trick.
More philosophical than some of the stuff you said tho
You might enjoy Kafka on the Shore by Haruki Murakami
Yes ! I always got David Lynch vibes from Murakami
The Unconsoled by Kazuo Ishiguro
Gah I'm very disappointed in myself for not listing this as an example, under any other circumstance I push this book constantly
“Ninth House”. Not totally nonlinear but the MC has many flashbacks and it’s definitely creepy. Plus you get an overview of Yale university history, architecture, and it’s secret societies. The secret society occult happenings are fictional but the societies are real.
I felt like this during the first chapter of John Hawkes' The Lime Twig, felt very reminiscent of The Sound and the Fury with a darker tone. His book The Cannibal would also fit here. I have not read more by him but I want to.
Hawkes in general is one of my holy grails - I've been aware of him for years but for some reason his books are obscenely hard to get hold of in the UK.
Great recs already in this thread, and while these are light on the creepiness they do satisfy the non-linearity part so you may be interested.
This Is How You Lose the Time War by Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone. Take a look to make sure for yourself but it's a pretty short book written in an epistolary format and I hesitate to say more for spoiler reasons but it is non-linear. Great prose, quite poetic, interesting ideas as well.
Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel is another non-linear story about a global virus bringing the world to a halt (sounds very familiar eh but it was written pre-covid). Def more creepy than the first reco but still non-linear narrative that I enjoyed.
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I recommend The Sea of Tranquility by Emily St. John Mandel!
Want something extremely weird? Check out Letters to Wendy's by Joe Wenderoth.
Marabou Stork Nightmares by Irvin Welsh
Against the Day by Thomas Pynchon. Its a long one, but it has a lot of what you've mentioned, and is a very uniquely structured story.
Hi there. Per rule 3.3, please post book recommendation requests in /r/SuggestMeABook or in our Weekly Recommendation Thread. Thank you!
readntraveln t1_jd2abd4 wrote
House of Leaves was weird/creepy