Perhaps literature’s most lovable eccentric, a soldier who recreates battles in his bowling green because he cannot express his emotions through words.
If you expect a standard biography, prepare to be trolled. Tristram, our narrator, attempts to tell his life story but is so distracted by context—his father’s eccentric theories, his Uncle Toby’s obsession with military fortifications, and the very physics of how he was conceived—that he doesn't even manage to get himself born until several volumes into the book. 2. Sterne’s Narrative Anarchy Tristram Shandy - Laurence Sterne.epub
An entirely ink-filled page to mourn a character’s death. Perhaps literature’s most lovable eccentric, a soldier who
A 600-page "shaggy dog" story that manages to be about everything and nothing at the same time. It is exhausting, hilarious, and arguably the most influential "experimental" novel ever written. 1. The "Plot" (Or Lack Thereof) It is exhausting, hilarious, and arguably the most
Finding a "proper" way to review Tristram Shandy is a bit of a paradox, considering the book itself is a masterpiece of being Improper. Laurence Sterne’s 18th-century classic isn't just a novel; it’s a high-wire act of digression, humor, and meta-commentary that feels more modern than most books written today.
The humor is bawdy, intellectual, and deeply human. Sterne mocks the Enlightenment’s obsession with logic by showing just how irrational human beings actually are. 4. Why It Still Matters
Here is a review structured to capture the chaotic brilliance of the text. Review: The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman
Perhaps literature’s most lovable eccentric, a soldier who recreates battles in his bowling green because he cannot express his emotions through words.
If you expect a standard biography, prepare to be trolled. Tristram, our narrator, attempts to tell his life story but is so distracted by context—his father’s eccentric theories, his Uncle Toby’s obsession with military fortifications, and the very physics of how he was conceived—that he doesn't even manage to get himself born until several volumes into the book. 2. Sterne’s Narrative Anarchy
An entirely ink-filled page to mourn a character’s death.
A 600-page "shaggy dog" story that manages to be about everything and nothing at the same time. It is exhausting, hilarious, and arguably the most influential "experimental" novel ever written. 1. The "Plot" (Or Lack Thereof)
Finding a "proper" way to review Tristram Shandy is a bit of a paradox, considering the book itself is a masterpiece of being Improper. Laurence Sterne’s 18th-century classic isn't just a novel; it’s a high-wire act of digression, humor, and meta-commentary that feels more modern than most books written today.
The humor is bawdy, intellectual, and deeply human. Sterne mocks the Enlightenment’s obsession with logic by showing just how irrational human beings actually are. 4. Why It Still Matters
Here is a review structured to capture the chaotic brilliance of the text. Review: The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman