When you think of footnotes in fiction the one most people think of is probably Terry Pratchett where he uses them for humorous little asides in his books. But Mr Pratchett writes comedy and I was wondering whether or not that might give him a pass for unconventional story formats. Already being famous and having lots of fans probably doesn't hurt either.
Do you think it could be used in a more serious story, or even just one that's not straight comedy, or written to be purposefully 'weird'?
I'm writing fantasy set in another world which is obviously going to need exposition at times when the reader encounters something not of our world. Some things, like elves and dragons, I can expect the audience to already know about, but made-up creatures or cultural differences may have to be explained. I'd like to avoid paragraphs of narrative exposition, or conversations with other characters that make the MC out to be someone who knows nothing about the world she lives in. Basically I want to keep conversations as natural as possible and avoid any 'so you know about X right? or 'as you know' sort of phrasing. I'm writing in first person so I'd also like to avoid a character who walks around constantly thinking about what should be, to her anyway, common everyday occurrences, but would be things that would have to be explained to readers.
The MC is well-read in cultural studies so I was thinking about using footnotes that are excerpts from the various books she's read. They could provide information to the reader in a textbook context while not interrupting the story. I also liked the idea of showing some minor contradictions between the footnote information and what the MC is personally experiencing on her journey, implying that her world's academic community isn't as accurate as it pretends to be, especially when writing about people of other cultures. Later stories would then start to use excerpts from the MC's personal notes rather than the textbooks showing her over time improving the quality of information available to her and her country.
Thoughts?
Footnotes in fiction? Yes? No?
Any reading suggestions that do something similar?