Family Saga

The family saga is a genre of literature which chronicles the lives and doings of a family or a number of related or interconnected families over a period of time. In novels (or sometimes sequences of novels) with a serious intent, this is often a thematic device used to portray particular historical events, changes of social circumstances, or the ebb and flow of fortunes from a multiple of perspectives.

The typical family saga follows generations of a family through a period of history in a series of novels. A number of sub-genres of the form exist such as the AGA saga.

Successful writers of popular family sagas include Susan Howatch, R. F. Delderfield and Philippa Carr.

Examples of family sagas of literary note include:

  • Dream of the Red Chamber - one of the Four Great Classical Novels of Chinese Literature, it chronicles the rise and decline of the Jia family;
  • The Sagas of Icelanders - the medieval Icelandic family sagas from whence the word 'saga' is derived;
  • Brideshead Revisited, by Evelyn Waugh;
  • Buddenbrooks, by Thomas Mann;
  • The Covenant, by James A. Michener;
  • Dune, by Frank Herbert;
  • The Forsyte Saga, by John Galsworthy;
  • Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe, by Fannie Flagg;
  • The Hotel New Hampshire, by John Irving;
  • Go Tell It on the Mountain by James Baldwin;
  • The House of the Spirits by Isabel Allende;
  • The Jalna books, by Mazo de la Roche;
  • The Kent Family Chronicles and The Crown Family Saga, by John Jakes;
  • The Immigrants, by Howard Fast;
  • The Mallens, by Catherine Cookson;
  • One Hundred Years of Solitude, by Gabriel García Márquez
  • The Palaeologian Dynasty. The Rise and Fall of Byzantium, by George Leonardos;
  • Roots, by Alex Haley;
  • The Thorn Birds, by Colleen McCullough;
  • Holes, a novel by Louis Sachar;
  • The Lymond Chronicles and The House of Niccolò, Renaissance-set novel series by Dorothy Dunnett;
  • Fall on Your Knees, by Ann-Marie MacDonald;
  • Middlesex, by Jeffrey Eugenides;
  • White Teeth, by Zadie Smith;
See also: Category:Family saga novels

Read more about Family Saga:  In Cinema

Famous quotes containing the word family:

    Our civility, England determines the style of, inasmuch as England is the strongest of the family of existing nations, and as we are the expansion of that people. It is that of a trading nation; it is a shopkeeping civility. The English lord is a retired shopkeeper, and has the prejudices and timidities of that profession.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)