What do you think about diary-style stories?

AliceMoonvale

Memehead. Hell Priest of Memes.
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Now, to anyone who has the misfortune of knowing who I am, you're likely thinking things such as:
  • Stfu retard. No one likes you.
  • Are you trying to gain attention to your story? Cringe.
And you might be right.
But am I actually trying to draw attention to my diary-formatted story?
Not really, surprisingly.

I wanted to know if anyone else has ever read any books/web novels that were written like diaries/journals. And as niche as it is, you've seen it a lot actually. You've likely seen stray pages to collect and read in video games that hand-feed you lore. Little notes, crumpled diary entries, audio logs, etc.

Best well known examples from games I've played that you probably know:

  • Resident Evil - all the diary and lab notes detailing the outbreak
  • Silent hill - letters and personal notes
  • Bioshock - audio diaries
  • Dead Space - audio logs, video/text
  • SCP Foundation - those fake reports/documents
  • Doki Doki Literature Club - (for all you gay anime fans) - lot of unreliable perspective, journal-ish meta fragmentation

From movies/books/other media I can think of off the top of my head:

  • ARGS - pretty much all of them, some better than others
  • Dracula - journals, letters, telegrams, newspaper clippings
  • Frankenstein - letters & testimonies
  • The Color Purple - letters
  • Stephen King's Carrie - news reports, documents weaved in
  • The Martian - mission/journal logs
  • The Blair Witch Project - found/recovered footage
  • Paranormal Activity - home recordings
  • As Above, So Below - expedition footage
This type of storytelling essentially weaponizes intimacy. No, not that kind.

I love found evidence/footage. Especially when it's done right and feels authentic and or immersive. So whether you like it or not, there's likely been at least one time where you've had the voyeurism 'interest'.

Don't lie to yourself, you like some of this shit.

 

MFontana

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Oct 24, 2025
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Now, to anyone who has the misfortune of knowing who I am, you're likely thinking things such as:
  • Stfu retard. No one likes you.
  • Are you trying to gain attention to your story? Cringe.
And you might be right.
But am I actually trying to draw attention to my diary-formatted story?
Not really, surprisingly.

I wanted to know if anyone else has ever read any books/web novels that were written like diaries/journals. And as niche as it is, you've seen it a lot actually. You've likely seen stray pages to collect and read in video games that hand-feed you lore. Little notes, crumpled diary entries, audio logs, etc.

Best well known examples from games I've played that you probably know:

  • Resident Evil - all the diary and lab notes detailing the outbreak
  • Silent hill - letters and personal notes
  • Bioshock - audio diaries
  • Dead Space - audio logs, video/text
  • SCP Foundation - those fake reports/documents
  • Doki Doki Literature Club - (for all you gay anime fans) - lot of unreliable perspective, journal-ish meta fragmentation

From movies/books/other media I can think of off the top of my head:

  • ARGS - pretty much all of them, some better than others
  • Dracula - journals, letters, telegrams, newspaper clippings
  • Frankenstein - letters & testimonies
  • The Color Purple - letters
  • Stephen King's Carrie - news reports, documents weaved in
  • The Martian - mission/journal logs
  • The Blair Witch Project - found/recovered footage
  • Paranormal Activity - home recordings
  • As Above, So Below - expedition footage
This type of storytelling essentially weaponizes intimacy. No, not that kind.

I love found evidence/footage. Especially when it's done right and feels authentic and or immersive. So whether you like it or not, there's likely been at least one time where you've had the voyeurism 'interest'.

Don't lie to yourself, you like some of this shit.

As a full narrative, this kind of thing wouldn't appeal to me. Primarily because I'm not overly fond of reading narrative fiction written in the first person perspective.
As supportive story bits / interludes, this kind of thing has a completely different feel.

Imagine, you've just finished reading the climax of a story arc, and finished the chapter, but one of the characters happened to find an old journal that they started reading.
And before the next chapter, you're treated to an interlude that is the journal entry the character was reading.

My own approach, inspired by R.A. Salvatore's The Legend of Drizzt, utilizes journal entries, letters, and the like written from the perspective of one of the characters in the story, usually a PoV character. Or I'll tie the interludes in as lore beats between narrative arcs to add an extra bit of flavor to the coming narrative thread.

So, these interludes are usually, intended to come across to the reader as their own "found-footage" type content tucked away in the pages of the story itself.
 

Madkins

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  • Stfu retard. No one likes you.
  • Are you trying to gain attention to your story? Cringe.
My favorite part of the rant. Alice you should know you are one of my favorite people here, no sarcasm.

Plus, i genuinely enjoy your story.
It's good stuff all around.
 

AliceMoonvale

Memehead. Hell Priest of Memes.
Joined
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Messages
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As a full narrative, this kind of thing wouldn't appeal to me. Primarily because I'm not overly fond of reading narrative fiction written in the first person perspective.
As supportive story bits / interludes, this kind of thing has a completely different feel.

Imagine, you've just finished reading the climax of a story arc, and finished the chapter, but one of the characters happened to find an old journal that they started reading.
And before the next chapter, you're treated to an interlude that is the journal entry the character was reading.

My own approach, inspired by R.A. Salvatore's The Legend of Drizzt, utilizes journal entries, letters, and the like written from the perspective of one of the characters in the story, usually a PoV character. Or I'll tie the interludes in as lore beats between narrative arcs to add an extra bit of flavor to the coming narrative thread.

So, these interludes are usually, intended to come across to the reader as their own "found-footage" type content tucked away in the pages of the story itself.

I can understand that, it's not for everyone.
I personally just love it so much that I wanted to turn it into a whole story and make it work that way.

Found footage in general is fun. I think it's great games, particularly horror games.

My favorite part of the rant. Alice you should know you are one of my favorite people here, no sarcasm.

Plus, i genuinely enjoy your story.
It's good stuff all around.

Thank you, if true.
And thanks for reading as well, I appreciate it! :blob_aww:

And despite you liking me and my story, this will not absolve you from my occasional cyberbullying of your often terrible, tone-deaf jokes that make me cringe as if my skeleton became flaccid like cooked spaghetti.
 

Madkins

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Thank you, if true.
And thanks for reading as well, I appreciate it! :blob_aww:
Definitely true
And despite you liking me and my story, this will not absolve you from my occasional cyberbullying of your often terrible, tone-deaf jokes that make me cringe as if my skeleton became flaccid like cooked spaghetti.
I wouldn't have it any other way :blob_highfive:
 

MFontana

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I can understand that, it's not for everyone.
I personally just love it so much that I wanted to turn it into a whole story and make it work that way.

Found footage in general is fun. I think it's great games, particularly horror games.
It can definitely work in the horror genre. Especially for survival-horror video games (IE: Resident Evil, Alien: Isolation) and movies (Paranormal Activity, Blair Witch Project, and so on).
In fact, you just gave me a good idea for the survival-horror story idea I had filed away as a "maybe later" story project that would incorporate bits of this found-footage type thing.
Over the course of the story (main narrative written in third person limited), the character(s) stumble on various clues. Old research notes. Torn documents. Old journals or diaries. And those notes are injected into the story itself for the readers to read. Not as interludes, but within the narrative itself.

I'm not sure if, or when, I'll ever get around to writing it though.
 

AliceMoonvale

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It can definitely work in the horror genre. Especially for survival-horror video games (IE: Resident Evil, Alien: Isolation) and movies (Paranormal Activity, Blair Witch Project, and so on).
In fact, you just gave me a good idea for the survival-horror story idea I had filed away as a "maybe later" story project that would incorporate bits of this found-footage type thing.
Over the course of the story (main narrative written in third person limited), the character(s) stumble on various clues. Old research notes. Torn documents. Old journals or diaries. And those notes are injected into the story itself for the readers to read. Not as interludes, but within the narrative itself.

I'm not sure if, or when, I'll ever get around to writing it though.

Sounds like a fun read, always a fan of that type of thing cause of all the specific games I've played.
Some people get annoyed by all the like 'telling' not showing, but I enjoy it when done right and not just info dumps.
 

LiteraryWho

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Now, to anyone who has the misfortune of knowing who I am, you're likely thinking things such as:
  • Stfu retard. No one likes you.
  • Are you trying to gain attention to your story? Cringe.
Self loathing is cringe, ironic or no :blob_evil_two:

As to the topic. The only story I can think of that's 100% logs/diaries is The Magnus Archives (a "radio" play). It has its flaws (changing from an anthology to a serial made a bit of a mess in the lore, and the final season is mid), but none of those stem from the story being told as a series of recorded interviews.

I personally always enjoy "journaling" sprinkled into a story, it's a fun way to inject "third party" analysis into the narrative (e.g. in pokefics, it's a common trope to include "forum posts" with colorful commentary on the MC or w/e).
 

Makimaam

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There are some epistolary format books that have been adapted into mainstream media, like The Princess Diaries or The Perks of Being a Wallflower.
 

AliceMoonvale

Memehead. Hell Priest of Memes.
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Self loathing is cringe, ironic or no :blob_evil_two:

As to the topic. The only story I can think of that's 100% logs/diaries is The Magnus Archives (a "radio" play). It has its flaws (changing from an anthology to a serial made a bit of a mess in the lore, and the final season is mid), but none of those stem from the story being told as a series of recorded interviews.

I personally always enjoy "journaling" sprinkled into a story, it's a fun way to inject "third party" analysis into the narrative (e.g. in pokefics, it's a common trope to include "forum posts" with colorful commentary on the MC or w/e).

It's a low-effort joke, hope you enjoy the next one~

Magnus Archives was pretty decent, but sadly I got bored after the first season. I do love the idea of recorded interviews, but it felt silly after awhile? Idk. Also, first time I've ever seen someone reference 'pokefics', especially in relation to epistolary themes. :blobrofl:

There are some epistolary format books that have been adapted into mainstream media, like The Princess Diaries or The Perks of Being a Wallflower.

Ayyy thems some classics. It also reminds me of Gone Girl too.
 
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