The whimsical freedom of the seventeenth century led to some of the most innovative fiction ever conceived, and Tristram Shandy is no exception. Its narrator sets out to tell his life story but goes off on so many tangents that it takes him two hundred pages to get to his birth. The book itself is chaotically filled with blank pages, scrawled lines, musical scores, skipped chapters, and entire sections written in Latin, plus a whole load of sex jokes for careful readers. The innovations are fun, but the archaic prose makes for a challenging 650-page slog.
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Where I Got It
An old Modern Library edition picked up from the English department free table, sometime in fall 2014.
More
Full text at Project Gutenberg
Quick and Easy Guide to Reading Tristram Shandy (I really wish the person who made this site had kept it up, since it promised to be both funny and down-to-earth about a really difficult novel, and also because it compared Tristram Shandy to a Choose-Your-Own-Adventure book)