The other day I attended a workshop facilitated by Maurice Mireau (author of Detachment: An Adoption Memoir). The
topic? Memoir writing. It was a worthwhile event.
The difference between fiction and nonfiction is something
I’ve often thought about. My first two books have been inspired by true events
and yet I was determined to create fiction out of them. Why? I felt that it
gave me more freedom to explore my characters. I had the plot—the historical events—that was
straightforward. But I wanted to play with the characters and for that I needed
the form of the novel.
Now as I work on my third, which is my most imaginative book
yet, I question my imagination and my purpose. I am inventing the plot set
against the bigger political scene and have done much research to build a
base for the drama of the story. It’s been an intensely interesting journey.
And yet, for me, as the writer, I seek a different truth
than that found in the history books or even in the oral histories of people I
interview. I’m seeking the truth about my mother. I’m seeking her reaction to
life events. This is my focus. What made my mother tick? Why is this so
important to me? Because it helps me to understand the truth about our
relationship and insight into myself. (Narcissism? Or maybe just an insatiable
curiousity?)
As I continue to explore this relationship, and of necessity
that tumultuous history my mother lived through, I find the line between memoir
and fiction blurring. Am I writing
fiction or memoir? How do I decide?
It’s with relief that I’ve discovered that the line between fiction and memoir has become more smudged in recent years. David Shields (Reality Hunger: A Manifesto) borrows
from everyone as he discusses the blurred distinction between fiction and
nonfiction. He quotes, among others, Picasso: “Art is not truth, art is a lie
that enables us to recognize truth.” (82)
What is memoir?
In Inventing the Truth: The Art and Craft of Memoir, William Zinsser writes that memoir is
an attempt at ” inventing the truth” and not necessarily fact-based. The novel is an
illusion of reality—an invention—with a heavy focus on external plot. Memoir, on the other hand, focuses more
on internal plot. Memoir attempts to discover personal truth, while fiction
attempts to entertain through escapism, through invention of reality. Neither
excludes the other.
This mumble-jumble of story...mixing up reality and fiction
under the guise of truth is what defines creativity. As artists we borrow, we steal, we re-invent. I’m feeling a
tad more confident in my own writing now because my stories are a confusion of
fact and fiction—still seeking truth, between the lines. And like Rudyard
Kipling says, “If history were taught in the form of stories, it would never be
forgotten.”
Looks like there's more than one way to tell the truth!
2 comments:
I've wondered about the non-fiction & memoir distinction, too. Thanks for laying it all out so clearly.
Not sure it's all that clear, but thanks!
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