I agree that Vernor Vinge’s A Deepness in the Sky is an example.
Almost but not quite an example: Edmund Cooper’s The Overman Culture. It is obvious to the reader from the outset that the characters cannot be when and where they think the are (evacuated from London during World War 2).Maybe not enough deceiver’s perspective to count.
Also not quite: Gene Wolfe’s The Book of the New Sun.
Seconded Book of the New Sun. But note that Wolfe also writes in an obtuse high-literature style that might be offputting to the typical ratfic reader, which made me drop BotNS the first time through; you’d better read some of his short stories first to get some priors.
I agree that Vernor Vinge’s A Deepness in the Sky is an example.
Almost but not quite an example: Edmund Cooper’s The Overman Culture. It is obvious to the reader from the outset that the characters cannot be when and where they think the are (evacuated from London during World War 2).Maybe not enough deceiver’s perspective to count.
Also not quite: Gene Wolfe’s The Book of the New Sun.
Seconded Book of the New Sun. But note that Wolfe also writes in an obtuse high-literature style that might be offputting to the typical ratfic reader, which made me drop BotNS the first time through; you’d better read some of his short stories first to get some priors.