We all know the standard topics about POV. First person is more immediate and personal, 2nd person is close to pointless and 3rd-person is mindnumpingly predictable. But I'm reading a book (I'm making up for lost time) that turns the POV protocols on their heads.
Instead of having a single protagonist describe what's happening, with no one knowing what they're unaware of, the author uses the first-person narrative to illustrate how everyone in the story is lost, adrift and desperate. Each chapter is only a few pages, where one person does something, and the next is about someone else who's somewhat impacted, and the previous person's actions send them spiraling in an all-new direction.
It's a particular effective technique, and one which I haven't encountered before (and scratching my head over why I haven't considered it before). Best of all, breaking the forth wall, the narrator (in the name of the various unnamed characters skittering away from the others), carefully explains what they're thinking, and how these largely random events affects them personally.
So, my question today is, has anyone here broken a standard 'rule' of writing in order to achieve a particular effect (i.e. not just to get a story to work, but because it reflected a particular state of mind)?
Going first, I've only done it once, when I wrote an entire book where the weather was a central character (essentially a NPC), where the weather in each chapter is a epigraph, foreshadowing both the emotional aspects of that chapter, but also how it was likely to turn out. It worked well, but best of all, it was something that no one else ever picked up on (despite my commenting on it in my blog at the time).
Great techniques should never be obvious, after all, we don't want to hammer readers over the heads with our literary wrenches, but if it moves the story forward, especially in a novel, unpredictable way, then what's not to love about it?
So, does anyone have any similar examples of bending the standard storytelling norms to convey an emotional state using a book's very structure? I'm really curious where this may have worked or when it didn't (especially any I hadn't previously noticed on my own).