Bakers Dozen

Neither of these fit the category. I, Robot includes the story “Escape!,” about the successful development and first use of a hyperspatial drive, taking the crew well outside of the Solar System. And, as Eutychus notes, 2001 concludes with Bowman’s travel via an alien star gate, also far beyond the Solar System.

So I’ll substitute:

  1. Metropolis (1927)
  2. Limitless (2011)

In play:

Books where the story is told by more than one character’s point of view

  1. As I Lay Dying - William Faulkner
  2. A Song of Fire and Ice - George R. R. Martin
  3. Les Liaisons Dangereuses - Chodleros de Laclos
  4. The Stand - Stephen King
  5. The Collector - John Fowles
  6. Then We Came to the End - Joshua Ferris

Told in the collective and individual voices of employees of a failing Chicago ad agency.

Books where the story is told by more than one character’s point of view

  1. As I Lay Dying - William Faulkner
  2. A Song of Fire and Ice - George R. R. Martin
  3. Les Liaisons Dangereuses - Chodleros de Laclos
  4. The Stand - Stephen King
  5. Then We Came to the End - Joshua Ferris
  6. ***The Woman in White ***- WIllkie Collins

Books where the story is told by more than one character’s point of view

  1. As I Lay Dying - William Faulkner
  2. A Song of Fire and Ice - George R. R. Martin
  3. Les Liaisons Dangereuses - Chodleros de Laclos
  4. The Stand - Stephen King
  5. Then We Came to the End - Joshua Ferris
  6. The Woman in White - Willkie Collins
  7. The Red Pyramid - Rick Riordan

Books where the story is told by more than one character’s point of view

  1. As I Lay Dying - William Faulkner
  2. A Song of Fire and Ice - George R. R. Martin
  3. Les Liaisons Dangereuses - Chodleros de Laclos
  4. The Stand - Stephen King
  5. Then We Came to the End - Joshua Ferris
  6. The Woman in White - Willkie Collins
  7. The Red Pyramid - Rick Riordan
  8. The Collector - John Fowles

Books where the story is told by more than one character’s point of view

  1. As I Lay Dying - William Faulkner
  2. A Song of Fire and Ice - George R. R. Martin
  3. Les Liaisons Dangereuses - Chodleros de Laclos
  4. The Stand - Stephen King
  5. Then We Came to the End - Joshua Ferris
  6. The Woman in White - Willkie Collins
  7. The Red Pyramid - Rick Riordan
  8. The Collector - John Fowles
  9. Sometimes a Great Notion - Ken Kesey

Books where the story is told by more than one character’s point of view

  1. As I Lay Dying - William Faulkner
  2. A Song of Fire and Ice - George R. R. Martin
  3. Les Liaisons Dangereuses - Chodleros de Laclos
  4. The Stand - Stephen King
  5. Then We Came to the End - Joshua Ferris
  6. The Woman in White - Willkie Collins
  7. The Red Pyramid - Rick Riordan
  8. The Collector - John Fowles
  9. Sometimes a Great Notion - Ken Kesey
  10. The Bible - various authors

Books where the story is told by more than one character’s point of view

  1. As I Lay Dying - William Faulkner
  2. A Song of Fire and Ice - George R. R. Martin
  3. Les Liaisons Dangereuses - Chodleros de Laclos
  4. The Stand - Stephen King
  5. Then We Came to the End - Joshua Ferris
  6. The Woman in White - Willkie Collins
  7. The Red Pyramid - Rick Riordan
  8. The Collector - John Fowles
  9. Sometimes a Great Notion - Ken Kesey
  10. The Bible - various authors
  11. Dracula - Bram Stoker

Books where the story is told by more than one character’s point of view

  1. As I Lay Dying - William Faulkner
  2. A Song of Fire and Ice - George R. R. Martin
  3. Les Liaisons Dangereuses - Chodleros de Laclos
  4. The Stand - Stephen King
  5. Then We Came to the End - Joshua Ferris
  6. The Woman in White - Willkie Collins
  7. The Red Pyramid - Rick Riordan
  8. The Collector - John Fowles
  9. Sometimes a Great Notion - Ken Kesey
  10. The Bible - various authors
  11. ***The Pigman ***by Paul Zindel
  12. Dracula - Bram Stoker
  13. *****The Poisonwood Bible *****by Barbara Kingsolver

I’ll pass

Fictional Gangsters

  1. Johnny Rocco (Key Largo)

Fictional Gangsters

  1. Johnny Rocco (Key Largo)
  2. Marsellus Wallace (Pulp Fiction)

Fictional Gangsters

  1. Johnny Rocco (Key Largo)
  2. Marsellus Wallace (Pulp Fiction)
  3. Meyer Wolfsheim (in The Great Gatsby; he was based on Arnold Rothstein, the real gangster who fixed the 1919 World Series)

Fictional Gangsters

  1. Johnny Rocco (Key Largo)
  2. Marsellus Wallace (Pulp Fiction)
  3. Meyer Wolfsheim (in The Great Gatsby; he was based on Arnold Rothstein, the real gangster who fixed the 1919 World Series)
  4. Hanoi Xan (from the scripted but never filmed sequel Buckaroo Banzai versus the World Crime League)

Fictional Gangsters

  1. Johnny Rocco (Key Largo)
  2. Marsellus Wallace (Pulp Fiction)
  3. Meyer Wolfsheim (in The Great Gatsby; he was based on Arnold Rothstein, the real gangster who fixed the 1919 World Series)
  4. Hanoi Xan (from the scripted but never filmed sequel Buckaroo Banzai versus the World Crime League)
  5. Pearly Soames (“A Winter’s Tale” by Mark Helprin)
  1. Johnny Rocco (Key Largo)
  2. Marsellus Wallace (Pulp Fiction)
  3. Meyer Wolfsheim (in The Great Gatsby; he was based on Arnold Rothstein, the real gangster who fixed the 1919 World Series)
  4. Hanoi Xan (from the scripted but never filmed sequel Buckaroo Banzai versus the World Crime League)
  5. Pearly Soames (“A Winter’s Tale” by Mark Helprin)
  6. Rocky Sullivan, James Cagney in Angels With Dirty Faces

Fictional Gangsters

  1. Johnny Rocco (Key Largo)
  2. Marsellus Wallace (Pulp Fiction)
  3. Meyer Wolfsheim (in The Great Gatsby; he was based on Arnold Rothstein, the real gangster who fixed the 1919 World Series)
  4. Hanoi Xan (from the scripted but never filmed sequel Buckaroo Banzai versus the World Crime League)
  5. Pearly Soames (“A Winter’s Tale” by Mark Helprin)
  6. Rocky Sullivan, James Cagney in Angels With Dirty Faces
  7. Tony Soprano (“The Sopranos”)

Fictional Gangsters

  1. Johnny Rocco (Key Largo)
  2. Marsellus Wallace (Pulp Fiction)
  3. Meyer Wolfsheim (in The Great Gatsby; he was based on Arnold Rothstein, the real gangster who fixed the 1919 World Series)
  4. Hanoi Xan (from the scripted but never filmed sequel Buckaroo Banzai versus the World Crime League)
  5. Pearly Soames (“A Winter’s Tale” by Mark Helprin)
  6. Rocky Sullivan, James Cagney in Angels With Dirty Faces
  7. Tony Soprano (“The Sopranos”)
  8. Wilson Fisk, aka the Kingpin (Marvel Comics)
  1. Johnny Rocco (Key Largo)
  2. Marsellus Wallace (Pulp Fiction)
  3. Meyer Wolfsheim (in The Great Gatsby; he was based on Arnold Rothstein, the real gangster who fixed the 1919 World Series)
  4. Hanoi Xan (from the scripted but never filmed sequel Buckaroo Banzai versus the World Crime League)
  5. Pearly Soames (“A Winter’s Tale” by Mark Helprin)
  6. Rocky Sullivan, James Cagney in Angels With Dirty Faces
  7. Tony Soprano (“The Sopranos”)
  8. Wilson Fisk, aka the Kingpin (Marvel Comics)
  9. Duke Mantee, Humphrey Bogart in Petrified Forest (1936)

Fictional Gangsters

  1. Johnny Rocco (Key Largo)
  2. Marsellus Wallace (Pulp Fiction)
  3. Meyer Wolfsheim (in The Great Gatsby; he was based on Arnold Rothstein, the real gangster who fixed the 1919 World Series)
  4. Hanoi Xan (from the scripted but never filmed sequel Buckaroo Banzai versus the World Crime League)
  5. Pearly Soames (“A Winter’s Tale” by Mark Helprin)
  6. Rocky Sullivan, James Cagney in Angels With Dirty Faces
  7. Tony Soprano (“The Sopranos”)
  8. Wilson Fisk, aka the Kingpin (Marvel Comics)
  9. Duke Mantee, Humphrey Bogart in Petrified Forest (1936)
  10. Fat Sam Staccetto (Bugsy Malone)

Fictional Gangsters

  1. Johnny Rocco (Key Largo)
  2. Marsellus Wallace (Pulp Fiction)
  3. Meyer Wolfsheim (in The Great Gatsby; he was based on Arnold Rothstein, the real gangster who fixed the 1919 World Series)
  4. Hanoi Xan (from the scripted but never filmed sequel Buckaroo Banzai versus the World Crime League)
  5. Pearly Soames (“A Winter’s Tale” by Mark Helprin)
  6. Rocky Sullivan, James Cagney in Angels With Dirty Faces
  7. Tony Soprano (“The Sopranos”)
  8. Wilson Fisk, aka the Kingpin (Marvel Comics)
  9. Duke Mantee, Humphrey Bogart in Petrified Forest (1936)
  10. Fat Sam Staccetto (Bugsy Malone)
  11. Michael Corleone

Fictional Gangsters

  1. Johnny Rocco (Key Largo)
  2. Marsellus Wallace (Pulp Fiction)
  3. Meyer Wolfsheim (in The Great Gatsby; he was based on Arnold Rothstein, the real gangster who fixed the 1919 World Series)
  4. Hanoi Xan (from the scripted but never filmed sequel Buckaroo Banzai versus the World Crime League)
  5. Pearly Soames (“A Winter’s Tale” by Mark Helprin)
  6. Rocky Sullivan, James Cagney in Angels With Dirty Faces
  7. Tony Soprano (“The Sopranos”)
  8. Wilson Fisk, aka the Kingpin (Marvel Comics)
  9. Duke Mantee, Humphrey Bogart in Petrified Forest (1936)
  10. Fat Sam Staccetto (Bugsy Malone)
  11. Michael Corleone
  12. Jabba the Hutt