10 of the Weirdest Novels Ever Written

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By Arthur Windermere

Introduction

While the following ten novels are some of the most unusual ever written, it would be foolish for many reasons to claim they are the weirdest. Not even taking into consideration the subjectivity inherent in any judgment of a novel's relative weirdness, there is the sheer multitude of novels that are forgotten in the realms of Out-of-Print, or are handbound and underground, or are simply not worth reading.

To this end, I have limited myself to novels that are in print, available in English and are critically esteemed for their literary merit--indeed, some on this list are genuine classics.

Further, by limiting myself to ten novels, I naturally must leave out some works that are equally worthy of appearing on this list. As for why, say, Huysmans and not Kafka makes the list, I have only my taste and intuition for justification.

Finally, I have tried to vary selections by having some old and some new, some weird in terms of content and others weird in terms of form. Hopefully in this variety you will find some novelty to delight you.

10. Against Nature

Joris-Karl Huysmans became a leader of French decadence when he wrote this fin-de-siecle novel. One des Esseintes is essentially the sole character, with a few other people rarely glimpsed for purely functional purposes, not unlike objects. The novel follows des Esseintes in his bizarre self-indulgences, like his encrusting a turtle with jewels--so many that it can't move and dies--his tastes in Latin literature, his seeking out of the strangest plants, his binding a room like a book, his attempts to eat entirely by means of enemas and so forth. Most miraculously, Huysmans manages to make Against Nature quite a gripping novel.

9. The Life and Opinions of the Tomcat Murr

E.T.A. Hoffman, as the major figure of German Romanticism and the inventor of modern 'magic realism,' was possibly the greatest and certainly the most influential author of 19th century Germany. He was already at the height of his career when he penned his last great novel and masterpiece, The Life and Opinions of the Tomcat Murr, often subtitled, together with a fragmentary Biography of Kappelmeister Johannes Kreisler on Random Sheets of Waste Paper.

Tomcat Murr--a real cat, self-taught to read and write--sets out to write his autobiography, using the composer Johannes Kreisler's biography for a blotting pad (i.e. scrap paper). By a printer's error these two biographies are woven together. What we read in Tomcat Murr is the result of this error: the unnaturally spliced biographies of a likeable if pompous and bourgeois tomcat and a moody, melancholic composer, paralleling one another in unexpected ways.

8. Not Wanted on the Voyage

What happens when Canadian post-modernist Timothy Findley decides to retell the story of Noah's Ark with no concern for 'historical' accuracy or fidelity to known texts? You get Not Wanted on the Voyage. Did you know that Noah's last name is Noyes, that he was a doctor who experimented on animals, that unicorns were the size of dogs, that animals used to be able to talk, that Lucifer is a seven-foot-tall woman with webbed fingers, or that Yahweh flooded the world on account of a depression? Fortunately, Findley informs us of such things.

The protagonists of the novel are Noah's wife, who is gradually becoming more rebellious towards her husband's obession with Yahweh's laws and tyrannical rule, and her cat Mottyl, who is 'not wanted on the voyage' because Yahweh wants his cats on the voyage of the Ark.

7. Life: A User's Manual

Life is a novel that contains many stories--one-hundred-seventy-nine to be exact--but has one central story, that of Bartlebooth, a man who has decided to devote his life to a meaningless task which culminates in solving a jigsaw puzzle. As the novel begins Bartlebooth has just died and at that moment Perec freezes activity in Bartlebooth's apartment block.

Perec dedicates one chapter to each room within the apartment block, going through them one-by-one in knight's moves until he's been through all, including the stairwell. Each room is described exhaustively. Occasionally, due to the occupants of the room, a chapter adds to the story of Bartlebooth and his life's work of solving jigsaw puzzles.

Naturally the experience of reading Life is itself an intellectual jigsaw puzzle in which the history of the apartment block and the lives of those within it are pieced together. The order in which one chooses to read the chapters matters little.

6. Exploits and Opinions of Dr. Faustroll, Pataphysician

Considered Alfred Jarry's masterpiece, Faustroll concerns the founder of pataphysics, which is the study of exceptions rather than laws of nature. Faustroll, back on his rent, flees Paris in a sieve for a boat with a talking baboon on navigation. Hopping from island to island, Faustroll teaches his non-science and encounters many bizarre people and surreal events. Among the many exploits of Dr. Faustroll is calculating the surface of God.

5. Dictionary of the Khazars

Forget plot and characters; forget linear narrative; Dictionary of the Khazars, purporting to be an historical record of the Khazar people, is indeed written as a dictionary. The entries, as in any dictionary, are arranged in alphabetical order and can be read in any order one wishes. Nevertheless, the subject matter is fantasy.

The book is divided into three major sections, Christian, Islamic, and Hebrew, each according to the sometimes-conflicting sources they provide on the Khazar people. The Khazars, for the purposes of this novel, are a fictional, pre-10th century European tribe. Although there is much factual content in the novel, that it is not slavish to historical accuracy gives author Milorad Pavic's imagination much leeway; and he takes full advantage, filling the novel with bizarre, surrealistic touches, magic, and mystery.

Note, too, that there are two editions, one male and one female. These editions are the same, save for fifteen lines.

Also worth checking out is Pavic's later novel Last Love in Constantinople, in which each chapter is a card from a tarot deck and the reader may arrange the chapters at will, 'divine' their own story by choosing the order.

Dictionary of the Khazars: A Lexicon Novel in 100,000 Words
Amazon Price: $4.00
List Price: $17.95
Last Love in Constantinople: A Tarot Novel for Divination
Amazon Price: $159.40
List Price: $18.95
Alphabetical Africa (New Directions Books)
Amazon Price: $11.01
List Price: $16.95
If on a Winter's Night a Traveler
Amazon Price: $1.96
List Price: $14.00

4. Alphabetical Africa

Alphabetical Africa, as one might have guessed, is a novel with a gimmick. The first chapter contains only words that begin with the letter 'A'. The second chapter allows words that begin with 'B' as well, the third 'C' words, and so on to chapter twenty-six. Then chapter twenty-seven begins taking away, starting with the 'Z' words all the way back to just 'A' words again.

Within this structure, author Walter Abish tells a tale of jewel thieves seeking a female partner, who has fled to Africa after betraying her partners and with whom the narrator is in love. Meanwhile, Africa is invaded by an army of ants and is painted orange by a tranvestite queen of Zanzibar.

3. How It Is

The final novel of Samuel Beckett, How It Is certainly is a fitting swan song for a career of weird. The entire novel is written without punctuation in a series of short paragraphs. It is divided into three parts, as the opening sentence informs: before Pim, with Pim, and after Pim. All parts, however, consist of one main action: one person crawling through mud, infinite (it seems) mud.

Were that not odd enough, it is written in the style of Beckett's earlier novels, that is, primarily the stream-of-consciousness of a scarcely human mind. Here is one paragraph for a sample, "the tongue gets clogged with mud that can happen too only one remedy then pull it in and suck it swallow the mud or spit it out it's one or the other and question is it nourishing and vistas last a moment with that"

2. If on a Winter's Night a Traveler

If on a Winter's Night a Traveler, by Italo Calvino, tells the story of the Reader, who is trying to read a book called If on a Winter's Night a Traveler by Italo Calvino. Unfortunately, he finds his goal continuously frustrated by printing errors, being given the wrong book and a vast literary conspiracy amongst other things.

Along the way, Calvino allows you, the reader, to read the chapters from the books the Reader reads but never gets to finish and which you will never get to finish. Each of these chapters involves a pastiche of one of several genres and styles. You also get to meet the Other Reader with whom you may just fall in love before you finish reading If on a Winter's Night a Traveler.

1. Finnegans Wake

James Joyce's final work, Finnegans Wake must be the weirdest novel ever written. Joyce spent seventeen years of his life writing the Wake due to the sheer amount of research involved. Nearly every word and ever sentence in Finnegans Wake can be read a dozen ways on account of deliberate misspellings and invented portmanteaus that hint at other words--in up to sixty different languages! For instance, "What then agentlike brought about that tragoady thundersday this municipal sin business? Our cubehouse still rocks as earwitness to the thunder of his arafatas..."

Apparently the story of the Finnegan's death and the consequences, it also reads as a history of the world and a history of thought. There's nothing else like it; though one novel that approaches is the obviously-influenced Gilligan's Wake, which lightly applies the Finnegans Wake technique to the characters of Gilligan's Island with interesting results.

 

Comments

cosmowriter profile image

cosmowriter 2 years ago

I barely know most of these books, but they look all interesting to me! I will surely read Finnegans Wake.

Arthur Windermere profile image

Arthur Windermere Hub Author 2 years ago

I'm glad you found something you like. Good luck getting through the Wake. Cheers!

H.D.Cyr profile image

H.D.Cyr 2 years ago

"If on a Winters Night a Traveler" sounds like it might be humorous. Is it?

Arthur Windermere profile image

Arthur Windermere Hub Author 2 years ago

HD Cyr: As is the case with most if not all postmodern literature, there is a good deal of humour within If on a Winter's Night a Traveler... However, it's generally a serious albeit amusingly clever book.

H.D.Cyr profile image

H.D.Cyr 2 years ago

Sounds good, then. Thanks.

lasept0010 2 years ago

I love Against Nature and The Life and Opinions of the Tomcat Murr... Thanks.

kotoh profile image

kotoh 24 months ago

Nice hub. Thanks for sharing

epigramman profile image

epigramman 24 months ago

Arthur - WHERE IS THE HOLY BIBLE ON THIS LIST?

WA Christopher J. profile image

WA Christopher J. 23 months ago

11. "The Green Child" by Herbert Read. Great list!

Arthur Windermere profile image

Arthur Windermere Hub Author 23 months ago

Wow, I've been neglecting to reply to this hub for a while. Sorry folks! Thanks to all of you for commenting.

epigramman - The Bible is full of weirdness. Especially the Catholic Bible, in which the prophet Daniel slays a dragon by making it explode. But it's not a novel.

WACJ - I'll look The Green Child up. Cheers!

guesty 21 months ago

another strange one: "a void", by georges perec. a novel written entirely without the letter E...!

Arthur Windermere profile image

Arthur Windermere Hub Author 20 months ago

Hey Guesty,

Indeed. Anything by Georges Perec could be on this list.

Cheers!

Feoruski Jhon 20 months ago

Weird sci-fi book by Dovin Melhee:

http://www.amazon.com/nSpace-Dovin-Melhee/dp/05572

,

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XAcirnrdGhw

izettl profile image

izettl Level 6 Commenter 20 months ago

Not sure if I've heard of any of these, but I'm not opposed to checking some out. Interesting ideas behind them. I respect weird. lol.

2patricias profile image

2patricias Level 5 Commenter 19 months ago

I've never read any of these, but now I've put "If on a winter's night" on my 'must read' list - sounds wonderful. Thanks for bringing it to my attention.

Arthur Windermere profile image

Arthur Windermere Hub Author 19 months ago

Hi Feoruski, thanks for the recommendation of the self-published novel. Yours, I presume.

Arthur Windermere profile image

Arthur Windermere Hub Author 19 months ago

Ahoy izettl!

Check 'em out and blow your mind! If folks didn't respect weird, I'd be pretty screwed.

Cheers!

Arthur Windermere profile image

Arthur Windermere Hub Author 19 months ago

2 Patricias are better than one. BUT a Patricia in the hand is worth 2 Patricias in the bush.

Anyway, thanks for dropping by Patx2! Yes, the Italo Calvino novel is genius. Hope you enjoy it.

Cheers!

Doug Turner Jr. profile image

Doug Turner Jr. Level 3 Commenter 18 months ago

These are mostly new to me. The one about the Khazars seems interesting. I recently read Michael Chabon's "Gentlemen of the Road", about the lost empire of Khazaria. Very cool stuff.

Arthur Windermere profile image

Arthur Windermere Hub Author 18 months ago

Hey Doug,

What? And you're supposed to be the English major. ;)

But seriously, glad I could introduce a future writer of masterpieces to these literary oddities. A few of them make Harold Bloom's Western Canon list, I believe.

Cheers!

mcrawford76 profile image

mcrawford76 17 months ago

Wow, those all sound very interesting, I think I have a lot of reading ahead of me. Thanks for the tips. See and I was just thinking about some Clive Barker, or A Wrinkle In Time.

hannah 16 months ago

any1 know the name of this weird novel where there is this boy. the narrator of the story who is sooo crazy, he shoots rabbits just to watch them suffer to death and also has killed his cousins when he was just a kid? and something about him actually being a girl...

gary ashton 12 months ago

house of leaves? it's weird and wonderful, and slightly scary.

mabmiles profile image

mabmiles Level 1 Commenter 10 months ago

Hmmm. I am quiet interested with the Dictionary of the Khazars.Thanks for sharing this nice hub.

Louise 7 months ago

Pygmy by Chuck Palahniuk was weird. Thanks for the hub by the way, these would be future bedtime stories for me (:

shea duane profile image

shea duane Level 6 Commenter 2 weeks ago

Wow, I've read everything by Joyce except Wake... maybe I should try it.

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