In my olden college days, while searching for the next movie that would let me procrastinate over not studying, I came across a website called Class Real. It’s a database of so-called “mindfuck” movies, organized by levels of just how much your brain will be fried upon consumption. I’ve always been a fan of narratives that will not just turn a premise on its head, but also make you question what you’ve read, and wonder how you got so tripped up on the rug they just pulled out from under you.
It’s not about throwing in plot twists just for the sake of it. It’s about hiding those tiny details so well, that when they get revealed, you let out a scream that’s either “I KNEW IT!” or “Damn, I never saw that coming.”
Today, I bring you five books that made me feel like that: books that start one way, and by the time you’re done with them, there have been so many twists and turns your brain will feel like it’s completely lost in a maze.
[Note: While there are no spoilers in this post, there may be some in the comments so tread with caution!]
This Mortal Coil by Emily Suvada
I read this book three or so years ago, and it was like being in a fever dream. Emily Suvada’s debut is a YA Science Fiction novel about Cat, whose father was the world’s leading geneticist and probably the only hope at finding a cure for a deadly virus. Now, I realize we’re going through a pandemic at the time of this article, and not everyone wants to read about fictional viruses ravaging the planet.
The genetic-engineering science in this novel doesn’t exist, but it’s done and explored in such a way you will believe it. The worldbuilding is incredibly complex, yet accessible. There’s a Pigeon Poem—yes, you read that right, a pigeon poem. And there are so many plot twists between these pages, you will constantly find yourself screaming at just how it’s possible that Suvada packed so many things into this book and did it successfully. By the end of the book, you still won’t have found our way out of the maze, but you’ll be so into it you’ll be breathing the next two books like it’s the freshest mountain air.
Legendborn by Tracy Deonn
I kid you not, all the lists I pitched for this article had Legendborn in it. It’s just a legendary book, and I’m sure most of you have heard of it. But, in case you haven’t, let me tell you about possibly the greatest YA Contemporary Fantasy that’s graced our shelves.
Legendborn follows Bree Matthews, who just lost her mom in an accident. On her first days at her early-college program, she decides to go to a party. Which is all good, until a monster appears. The young mage who drives the beast away tries to erase Bree’s memories of that night—and fails, leaving Bree (and you!) with a whole lot of questions. What’s a Merlin? Legendborn? Secret Society? WHAT?
Not only is it a masterclass in worldbuilding, it’s full to the brim with surprises and twists, and a cast of characters you will love to death. I know I will lie down on the train tracks for them. And if you hear a small voice in the wind telling you to sit down and read this immediately, it’s me.
Gideon the Ninth by Tamsyn Muir
You didn’t have to say anything beyond “lesbian goth necromancers in space” to get me interested in this book. Even though I’d bought this book months ago, I’d been delaying reading it because I like to start series when all volumes are out to spare myself the pain that’s the wait between books. But a friend made her case, so I sat down and I’m still reeling like I was put in the world’s greatest rollercoaster.
There is nothing out there quite like Gideon, both in terms of voice and the sheer madness of it all. It’s not just twisty in its narrative, but in writing as well. Because it’s with necromancers, you’d think death wouldn’t be of much of a stopping power—but then the bodies start piling up and you can’t help but read on as Gideon (and the others) try to solve what the heck’s going on. You will love some necromancers, you will hate a lot more, and you will be put through the wringer as you are dumped in the middle of bedlam. And you will love every moment of it.
Meanwhile, my copy of Harrow the Ninth hasn’t arrived yet, and there’s still a full year before Alecto the Ninth. And here I am, wrapped in my black cocoon, counting down the days for both. True suffering, I tell you.
The Bone Doll’s Twin by Lynn Flewelling
I love me a good dark fantasy, and fantasies don’t get darker than The Bone Doll’s Twin.
The first volume in the Tamir Triad starts out with a horrifying bang: twins, a boy and a girl, are born. Typically, the girl would inherit the throne following the prophecy of the line of warrior queens who protect Skala, but ever since the usurper king Erius stole the throne from his half-sister, women haven’t been allowed to rule. To protect the girl who should be queen, the boy twin is… killed. And some very bloody magic is used to make the girl appear to be a boy for the first several years of her life. Which she has no idea about, leading to a ton of further horrifying problems.
What follows is a complex story that will leave you guessing until the very last page. I know I lost a lot of hair reading this, I was pulling it out so much. Even though I read this series over five years ago, I still think about it, and some scenes are imprinted in my mind with photographic accuracy. Pick up this gem. Get wrecked. Thank me later.
The Weavers of Saramyr by Chris Wooding
Chris Wooding is one of the most underrated fantasy authors of our times, and most of his fanbase is in Europe. Which is a damned shame, because honestly? His books repeatedly blew me away. The Weavers of Saramyr was the first book I read from him, and it landed in my hands when the translation hit our shelves. Portuguese publishing can be notoriously bad when it comes to finishing series they pick up, and so I was left waiting years for the second and third volumes. I waited for the second, but by the time I reached the third, I realized I could read full novels in English. So, no more waiting! Sure, my copy is full of pencil underlines for words I didn’t know (in my defense, I was 16) but don’t think that I was put in a maze because I needed a dictionary from time to time.
I am 31 now, and as with books mentioned above, there are so many scenes I still remember like I read them today, along with so many twists and turns that make a maze seem like a linear construction. Also, as a baby queer, I intensely appreciated the f/f romance at a time where finding one was a maze in and of itself.
Born in the sunny lands of Portugal, Diana Pinguicha is a Computer Engineer graduate who currently calls Lisbon home. She can usually be found writing, painting, devouring extraordinary quantities of books and video games, or walking around with her bearded dragon, Norberta. She also has two cats, Sushi and Jubas, who would never forgive her if she didn’t mention them. Her debut, A Curse of Roses, will be out December 1st 2020 from Entangled: Teen.
The list sounds interesting (especially Legendborn), though I am not sure I want to read a book that starts with the murder of a baby.
As for the topic of the list, well, I think it is safe to say that practically all of Brandon Sanderson’s books could be put here.
I found Gideon the Ninth to be disappointing. I just found the main character to be too obnoxious.
Legendborn should be in the running for worst cover art.
Mods, I think that first cure should be hope?
@3: Thanks!
I would add Justine Larbalestier’s Liar, a YA that takes the unreliable narrator to new highs.
I’d like to nominate ‘The Binding’ by Bridget Collins.
Non spoilery blurb:
“Emmett Farmer is working in the fields when a letter arrives summoning him to begin an apprenticeship. He will work for a Bookbinder, a vocation that arouses fear, superstition and prejudice – but one neither he nor his parents can afford to refuse.
He will learn to hand-craft beautiful volumes, and within each he will capture something unique and extraordinary: a memory. If there’s something you want to forget, he can help. If there’s something you need to erase, he can assist. Your past will be stored safely in a book and you will never remember your secret, however terrible.
In a vault under his mentor’s workshop, row upon row of books – and memories – are meticulously stored and recorded.
Then one day Emmett makes an astonishing discovery: one of them has his name on it…”
Given the title of the article, maybe you should have considered Robert Silverberg’s, “The Man in the Maze” as part of the list? It has a number of plot twists, but then again it might not be labyrinthian enough for the writer’s taste?
Hexwood by Diana Wynne Jones should also be on here, I still return to that book ever so often. Great List
Europe in Autumn by Dave Hutchinson (the start of his Fractured Europe series) starts off feeling something like a heist/caper book, and then goes completely sideways in ways that you will not see coming.
Not a full-length book and probably hard to find right now, but IIUC due to be reprinted (or at least e-booked) by Tor: John M. Ford’s novella, “The Illusionist” (originally from Tor in Casting Fortune). A story about putting on a play in which 4 actors perform 12 major characters and some walk-ons, and two murder mysteries, and a few other things all tangled up together. (It took me ~6 readings to realize that he had in fact told us who the other murderer was.) Ford was always tangled and intense but this is one of his most concentrated works.
I’d add Ada Palmer’s Terra Ignota series, starting with “Too Like the Lightning” to this list. Filled with moments where things you thought you knew turn out to be entirely different.
It’s sooo exciting to see Chris Wooding on this list!! I absolutely adore Weavers trilogy and have always felt it was a hidden gem. But yes complex.
Im just about to get into Legendborn and now I’m more excited than I already was.
Amazing list!
CHip @10: my first thought for a nomination was JMF’s novella Fugue State (in a similar state of not-currently-available), which looks at first like three entirely different stories, and then turns out to be three deeply-connected stories, and then again might be three separate stories…
(JOEL ROSENBERG: “Hey, Mike, I hear you’re expanding Fugue State from a short story to a novella. Clearing up some of the ambiguities?”
MIKE FORD: “No, just adding new ones.”)
I always rec Megan Whalen Turner’s “The Queen’s Thief” series. The sixth and final book just came out this year so you can gulp it all down in one go rather than waiting 4+ years between volumes. Book 2 and 3 are just the peak of literature. And number 1 is such a delight to reread and notice something new every single time.
I’ll add Christopher Priest: almost all his novels.
Most may be familiar with THE PRESTIGE (because of the movie), but the real maze is–most probably–THE SEPARATION. Layer under layer under layer. Or, as Paul Kincaid had it: “Singling out the duplications in The Separation“: , where he sees ‘at least’ four parallel worlds.
Also suprised Philip K. Dick didn’t get a mention. No UBIK, MARTIAN TIME-SLIP or–possibly the most twisted (and best) of them all–THE THREE STIGMATA OF PALMER ELDRITCH?
Not to mention the great-great-great-grandmother of all mazes (it has never been solved): THE VOYNICH MANUSCRIPT: ?
And I’m certain to have missed quite a few other prominent ones.
Chris Wooding’s YA Storm Thief and Poison (standalones) are both also great and full of unexpected twists!
This is an awesome topic and I’m sure to get more new suggestions than is healthy for my Mt. Tsundoku.
I love books with twists and turns (if they’re done well) but it doesn’t happen very often that something in the story turns everything you thought to be true upside down. But it’s magnificent when it happens!
I remember reading Shutter Island (not SFF but a great read nonetheless); I hadn’t seen the movie and didn’t know much about the story. (I was on vacation and saw it on the book shelf of the place I was staying, recognized the name and just grabbed it.) When I came to that scene at the end I was like “What? Are you kidding me? That doesn’t make sense because it contradicts what I’ve read in previous chapters!”. Then I went back and re-read those passages and realized that it did not contradict them but it was rather so cleverly written as to mislead the reader without lying to them. Masterfully done!
So I’m happy to potentially find similar stories in my favorite genres!
@11 Chris Jordan: YES. The worldbuilding is kinda twisty from page one, and then when you find out about [spoiler]’s past … and what [spoiler] really is, or at least thinks and has convinced others that they are … and and and … whew. Eagerly looking forward to Perhaps the Stars.
@1 Celebrinnen: Mistborn isn’t really one of my favorite series (though I liked it a lot, don’t get me wrong), but it provided one of my favorite reading moments. “What? That’s not what I remember from before.” -flips back- “That’s NOT what it was before. Bad editor, no biscuit.” … and then the difference turned out to be a plot point!
@@@@@ 0, Diana Pinguicha:
There’s a Pigeon Poem—yes, you read that right, a pigeon poem.
Like this?
I have heard the pigeons of the Seven Woods
Make their faint thunder, and the garden bees
Hum in the lime-tree flowers; and put away
The unavailing outcries and the old bitterness
That empty the heart. I have forgot awhile
Tara uprooted, and new commonness
Upon the throne and crying about the streets
And hanging its paper flowers from post to post,
Because it is alone of all things happy.
I am contented, for I know that Quiet
Wanders laughing and eating her wild heart
Among pigeons and bees, while that Great Archer,
Who but awaits His hour to shoot, still hangs
A cloudy quiver over Pairc-na-lee.
[William Butler Yeats, In the Seven Woods, 1903]
jazzfish @@@@@ 13:
Yes, “Fugue State” is a brilliantly strange and twisty story. If we’re lucky, it might get re-issued as part of the republication of John M. Ford’s work that is finally starting to happen.
@2 I can’t say I disagree on GtN. However I found the second book much better by every measure, maybe give it a try.
I’d offer Yoon Ha Lee’s “Machineries of Empire” trilogy, starting with Ninefox Gambit. On the surface, military SF with a surreal twist, but underneath it’s layers upon layers of hidden plotting and backstabbing.
jazzfish@13: that is so Mike.
And then there’s “Erase, Record, Play”…
I LOVE LOVE LOVE Gideon the 9th…but I don’t find it that mysterious or twisty. I mean, it has some mystery but it’s more in support of the character building and that part of the book, at least for me, was pretty straightforward. Once the book settled into that part of the story it kind of ran on rails, progressed as other such mystery dungeon/house books do. I think if you set people up to expect a ton of twists and stuff it’ll read pretty standard and underwhelm. If you read it as a space necromancer book with expectations of fun tone, the plot can delight some…but really the twists aren’t what this book is about. Nor is it really about lesbian necromancers. And unlike someone who posted above I love the lead…and I usually can’t stand angsty leads (ie Jessica Jones or something).
Celebrinnen
The Bone Twin doesn’t start with the murder of a baby, if IIRC you don’t find out about it until part way through, and I wouldn’t have mentioned it had I been describing the book as it is a bit spoilerish.