ITT: books that change style from chapter/section to chapter/section. It can be within narrators too.
Other that I remember is, obviously, Ulysses.
The sound and the fury.
Benjy's opening section is one of the toughest pieces of literature I've read so far.
>>9108985
gonna check this up, thanks
So lots of Oulipo, then?
I'd argue that Musil's the Man Without Qualities counts, but only due to the total lack of a perspective (in some sense, as in the title). Sections of the Mahabharata and Pound's Cantos would also qualify, since they're fucking crazy. Arguably, most Zen literature is comprised of constant perspective shifting (including stylistically). Check out Bassho for sure.
There are also certain ways to structure ideas (like Ibn al-Arabi's "ringstones") that are quite related, but usually this is done philosophically and not stylistically.
Alan Moore's Voice of the Fire. each chapter is from the perspective of a different character in a different historical epoch, though all reside in Northampton.