Award-winning author Carter Wilson discusses the art of writing deceptive and unreliable narrators in thriller novels, including three reasons he likes to write them.
An unreliable narrator can often feel like a get-out-of-jail-free card these days. The immensely popular thriller genre is full of unsolved murders, hidden identities and missing people. When done ...
“Pee-wee as Himself,” touches on the highs and lows of Reubens’ life and career prior to his fame. He gets a call to work ...
Whether it's a mistaken identity, a fractured psyche, or a protagonist spiraling into madness, these tropes keep ...
Problematic relationships between board chairs and presidents seem to represent a troubling trend, Susan Resneck Pierce ...
Fans of David Fincher's classic psychological crime thriller Se7en will likely enjoy TV shows like Hannibal, True Detective, ...
But is Reubens an unreliable narrator in his own documentary? “Pee-wee as Himself” flirts with this idea as Reubens deadpans his way through interviews, cheekily asking, “Is that true?” ...
Company veteran Caroline Neff and newcomer Nick Gehlfuss perfectly inhabit the volatile couple in Sam Shepard's twisted love ...
When it comes to the unreliable narrator trope, Natsu Hyuuga nails it with Maomao's character after realizing how layered she ...