Djmac1031
The usual suspect
- Joined
- Aug 15, 2021
- Posts
- 4,822
So I'm about halfway through an audio version of the H.G. Wells classic "War Of The Worlds" when it occurred to me that the 1st person narrator has never once been referred to by name, not by himself or by other characters.
Wells takes it a step farther when at one point, the narrator begins to recount the adventures of "my brother" who, again, is never referred to by name.
The story still works quite well, and so far there was only one spot where things got confusing when the brother gets into a tussle with three other unnamed men. Lots of "he" and "him" floating around and it was tough to follow who was doing what to whom.
Ive written a few short stories where I chose not to name my narrator, but I find it an odd, interesting choice to write an entire novel without ever once naming the main character.
There are other characters that do not receive names either. The narrator spends some time with a character only referred to as "the curate," and the brother meets two women in his travels that he takes up with. While one is named, the other is referred to only as the "sister in law."
Got me thinking about other odd choices in writing, whether it be classic or modern literature, or our own stories.
Wells takes it a step farther when at one point, the narrator begins to recount the adventures of "my brother" who, again, is never referred to by name.
The story still works quite well, and so far there was only one spot where things got confusing when the brother gets into a tussle with three other unnamed men. Lots of "he" and "him" floating around and it was tough to follow who was doing what to whom.
Ive written a few short stories where I chose not to name my narrator, but I find it an odd, interesting choice to write an entire novel without ever once naming the main character.
There are other characters that do not receive names either. The narrator spends some time with a character only referred to as "the curate," and the brother meets two women in his travels that he takes up with. While one is named, the other is referred to only as the "sister in law."
Got me thinking about other odd choices in writing, whether it be classic or modern literature, or our own stories.
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