Last night in John Gardner's Art of Fiction, I ran across several different forms for novels and novellas, and I want to get the info down here.
I'll start by linking to several articles I'll be looking up on these types:
Then I might copy over some parts of Gardner's words to fill in the gaps.
- 'Energeic' novels
- Aristotle's approach, three-act structure etc
- Juxtapositional novels
- Lyrical novels
- With an element of musical rhythm and repetition in the structure and/or the prose
- Ellen Vrana wrote about lyrical writing in her Quora article. Scroll down to What is Lyrical Prose?
- Novellas as a single continuous action through one POV
- Novellas as 'baby novels' (broken action, multiple POVs)
- This entry is part 20 of 22 in the series Narrative and Poetic Form.
Different types of novels and novellas, according to John Gardner
Categories:
Series TOC
- Series: Narrative and Poetic Form
- Part 1: Introduction
- Part 2: Looking at what I call Poetic Film
- Part 3: Theater of the Absurd
- Part 4: What makes Poetic form work?
- Part 5: Poetic Narrative in film—analyzing Fires on the Plain
- Part 6: Poetic Prose
- Part 7: A Correction
- Part 8: Narrative = Masculine
- Part 9: Narrative = Masculine pt 2
- Part 10: Appollo/Dionysus
- Part 11: Film Studies—Dialectic in The New World
- Part 12: Transcendental (poetic) Style in Film
- Part 13: Film Studies—Dialectic in M*A*S*H
- Part 14: Film Studies—Dialectic in All That Jazz
- Part 15: Film Studies—Dialectic in Black Swan
- Part 16: Finito!
- Part 17: Active and Passive protags
- Part 18: Receptive
- Part 19: Protags
- Part 20: Lyrical and 'juxtapositional' novels
- Part 21: My studies into poetry and Romanticism
- Part 22: Good video on Iain McGilchrist's work
- This entry is part 20 of 22 in the series Narrative and Poetic Form.
Comments
Sort Comments By