An entirely ink-filled page to mourn a character’s death.
Tristram Shandy broke the "fourth wall" before the wall was even fully built. It reminds us that stories aren't straight lines; they are messy, circular, and interrupted by life. Reading it is an exercise in patience, but the reward is a profound connection with a narrator who treats you like an old, slightly confused friend. Tristram Shandy - Laurence Sterne.epub
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
Don't try to "finish" this book for the sake of the ending. Read it for the detours. As Tristram says, "Digressions, incontestably, are the sunshine;—they are the life, the soul of reading!" Reading it is an exercise in patience, but
Perhaps literature’s most lovable eccentric, a soldier who recreates battles in his bowling green because he cannot express his emotions through words.