I receive articles from publicists now and then, and here's a new one I thought I'd share. I don't yet know the author or her book.
But first, a plug. For those who will be in the Pacific Northwest in June, there are spots open at the Writer's Weekend in Bellvue, Washington. I'm doing my editing workshop, and the conference has excellent attendance by top editors and agents as well as helpful workshops.
by Amy Hassinger
Author of The Priest's Madonna: A Novel
Non-fiction is very much in the news these days. Capote, the James Frey debacle and the even creepier Nasdijj scam have raised the kinds of questions that plague many a memoir writer: how much can you really remember? How much can you ethically invent (creating dialogue, for example, from a forgotten conversation), and how much do you have to base on verifiable fact? What is the truth, anyway?
Here's where I turn tail and run. This is one of the reasons why I'm a fiction writer
Now, I'm not throwing down the gauntlet here. I don't mean to claim that fiction is a superior form. Both fiction and memoir are after the same thing, ultimately, which is to make order and meaning out of the chaos of experience. But as a fiction writer, I can't help but wonder at our culture's current infatuation with the "real." Memoir and creative non-fiction have been fashionable for the past ten or fifteen years. Simultaneously, we've seen the rise of less literary counterparts: Reality television, the confessional talk show, round the clock news, and the blog.
We're a culture obsessed with literal truth, with the facts. (This new literalism of mind has also reared its head in the world of religion: both fundamentalist and secular thought require a literal approach to myth and metaphor.)
Why? Where does this obsession come from? I suspect it might have something to do with fear. There's so much to fear
Power maybe, but wisdom? Do we really understand our lives better the
More we know? Do we have a better sense of how to behave in the world,
of how to treat our fellow creatures? Do we know where to find peace?
Do we have a fuller appreciation of beauty? We might find poetry in
scientific discoveries
This is where literature comes in. Both memoir and fiction can offer wisdom, moments of beauty, and
It delights in transforming a single daffodil into a rose garden, in
making a slightly irritating teacher into a miserable, tortured tyrant.
Exaggeration, embellishment, invention
These, and the fact that I have a crappy memory.
Amy Hassinger
Author Amy Hassinger is a graduate of Barnard College and the Iowa Writers' Workshop. She is the author of The Priest's Madonna and Nina: Adolescence. She teaches in The University of Nebraska's MFA Program in Creative Writing and lives in Illinois with her husband and daughter.
Next week: answers to some submitted questions. Do you have one?
For what it's worth
Ray
Free edit in exchange for posting permission. You send a sample that you have questions about and of which you'd like an edit. I won't post it without your permission.
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© 2006 Ray Rhamey


"But as a fiction writer, I can't help but wonder at our culture's current infatuation with the "real."
have to agree with you on that one. it could even be argued that there is more fact and reality in fiction these days than it is in non-fiction.
Posted by: non-fiction books | February 08, 2010 at 08:49 AM
The reality is, that, 'our culture's' 'current fascination (with) the 'real' is a fabrication itself.
Who is 'our'? Whose culture (is ours) in particular?
Current fascination" Hardly!
the 'real'?
Hassinger's ideas are shaky to say the least.
Response to above Comments:
fact? reality? Whose? What?
wake up.
Posted by: sashari | July 31, 2010 at 03:52 AM