Unreliable Narrator fantasy books
Trust them at your own risk. The story is theirs, and so is the spin.
The unreliable narrator is fantasy's most disorienting pleasure. Everything you've read is filtered through someone who is lying, deluded, traumatized, or some combination of the three — and the reveal recontextualizes the entire book. The trope demands a particular kind of reader, one who enjoys being played, enjoys rereading scenes in their head after the rug pulls, and enjoys the slow creeping suspicion that they've been misreading something obvious from chapter two.
Unreliable narrators show up most in adult fantasy and literary-leaning genre work, though YA has embraced the device too. Content varies, but the trope tends to coexist with darker material — trauma, manipulation, and morally compromised perspectives. If you're after a book that makes you doubt your footing, the entries below include some of the genre's most rewarding sleight-of-hand.
- Rug-pull reveals
- Reader has to read actively
- Layered, doubled meanings
- Recontextualizes on reread





























