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	<title>Sin and Syntax &#187; true fiction</title>
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		<title>Is True Fiction Just True Fraud?</title>
		<link>http://www.sinandsyntax.com/talking-story/is-true-fiction-just-true-fraud/</link>
		<comments>http://www.sinandsyntax.com/talking-story/is-true-fiction-just-true-fraud/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 28 Nov 2009 15:55:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Constance Hale</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Talking Story]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Alissa Quart]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[columbia journalism review]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[narrative journalism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[nonfiction genres]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[true fiction]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.sinandsyntax.com/?p=414</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A recent piece in the Columbia Journalism Review set me on edge. In “The Rise of True Fiction,” my colleague Alissa Quart writes about a trend she perceives in the literary landscape: “an increase in the blurring of neat and certain categories of ‘fiction’ and ‘nonfiction’ into something that we might call ‘true fiction.’”

I would recommend the essay to anyone practicing fiction, nonfiction, or memoir, with some caveats.



Related posts:<ol><li><a href='http://www.sinandsyntax.com/blog/try-a-little-frisson-with-your-nonfiction/' rel='bookmark' title='Permanent Link: Try a Little Frisson with Your Nonfiction'>Try a Little Frisson with Your Nonfiction</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.sinandsyntax.com/blog/critiquing-ken-burns/' rel='bookmark' title='Permanent Link: Critiquing Ken Burns'>Critiquing Ken Burns</a></li>
</ol>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A recent piece in the <em>Columbia Journalism Review</em> set me on edge. In “<a href="http://www.cjr.org/feature/the_rise_of_true_fiction.php" target="_blank">The Rise of True Fiction</a>,” my colleague Alissa Quart writes about a trend she perceives in the literary landscape: “an increase in the blurring of neat and certain categories of ‘fiction’ and ‘nonfiction’ into something that we might call ‘true fiction.’”</p>
<p>I would recommend the essay to anyone practicing fiction, nonfiction, or memoir, with some caveats.</p>
<p>Quart launches her column by discussing <em>The Hurt Locker</em>, a fictional action-movie whose “forensic, formalist style” she writes, aligns it with documentaries or biopics. (The film is rooted in a deeply reported article originally published in <em>Playboy</em>, and its author worked hand-in-glove with the film’s director.) Then Quart mentions books whose authors do the deep reporting, then depart from strict facts in their books—for example, <em>A.D.: New Orleans after the Deluge</em>, by Josh Neufeld, <em>What Is the What</em>, by Dave Eggers, and <em>Half Broke Horses</em>, by Jeannette Walls. The latter calls her recent book about her grandmother a “true life novel.”</p>
<p>So far, I’m with Quart. The list of writers who report or conduct historical research and then write fiction based on real-life stories is long and broad: in addition to the trio Quart mentions (Orwell, Capote, Mailer), there are Mark Twain (whose reporting set up his satire), John Steinbeck (whose journalism informed <em>The Grapes of Wrath)</em>, and contemporary novelists whose deep historical research makes their fiction come alive, like David Guterson (<em>Snow Falling on Cedars</em>), and Ian McEwan (<em>Atonement</em>). And let’s not forget Shakespeare, whose history plays were based on the lives of English kings and used events like The Wars of the Roses as departure points.</p>
<p>It’s when Quart starts talking about nonfiction that I begin to quibble. Or, in certain cases, quake. She makes the surprising assertion that “the category ‘nonfiction’ no longer has the frisson it once did or the assurance that a book or film will sell.” Tell that to Dexter Filkins, whose balancing of journalistic restraint and downright eloquence found expression in <em>The Forever War</em>. Or to Anne Hull, whose reporting on Walter Reed won her the Pulitzer, among other awards. Or to Adam Hochschild, whose <em>King Leopold’s Ghost</em> hardly disappeared into remainder bins.</p>
<p>(And when has there ever been “assurance” that an important work of nonfiction would find a commercial audience?)</p>
<p>Quart, who is a fellow this year at the Nieman Foundation, where I teach narrative journalism, quotes another colleague, Andrea Pitzer, the editor of the <em>Narrative Digest: </em>“The newshole for narrative nonfiction is shrinking,” Pitzer says. “You have to have a lot of dazzle to get it published at all. Letting the work go over a little to fiction lets it be more salable.”</p>
<p>The newshole may indeed be shrinking, but no editor I know would prefer a piece, however dazzling, that departed from fact over one with startling news or insight. There is a big difference between letting work “go over a little to fiction” and borrowing the techniques of fiction, which is, I suspect, what Pitzer meant. (Full discloser: I was the editor of the Digest for two years; Pitzer succeeded me.)</p>
<p>But since when are those techniques—plotting a drama, crafting character, describing scenes, capturing dialogue, parceling out details to heighten suspense, finding a narrative voice—the province of fiction anyway? Most of us consider them just elements of great writing, any great writing.</p>
<p>Quart says hipster online editor Larry Smith suggests that the graphic novel <em>A.D.</em> is just journalism in a new guise, and she quotes John D’Agata, the editor of the new anthology <em>The Lost Origins of the Essay</em>, who asks “Do we read nonfiction in order to receive information, or do we read it to experience art?”</p>
<p>Perhaps the problem is the word <em>nonfiction</em>, which may be so broad as to blur some important lines. I would argue that we indeed read <em>journalism</em>—news stories, whether told in a straight news style or in an artful narrative style—for information, and we want that information to be credible and fair. We read <em>narrative journalism</em>—factual stories told using writerly (<em>not</em> fictional) techniques like plot, suspense, description, and artful language—for information, too; it tells us something important about our world. And we read <em>essays</em> and even <em>blogs</em> for the ideas of their writers. Art—and certainly artfulness—can surface into any of these forms, but the primary reason to read nonfiction is to learn factual truths about our world.</p>
<p><em>Memoir</em>, one the other hand, is a form that does slide away from reported facts and toward remembered impressions. That, indeed, we read for its emotional rather than factual truths.</p>
<p>In the end, perhaps we blur lines by lumping a variety of genres writing into the binary categories of “fiction” and “nonfiction.”</p>
<p><em>—Constance Hale</em></p>


<p>Related posts:<ol><li><a href='http://www.sinandsyntax.com/blog/try-a-little-frisson-with-your-nonfiction/' rel='bookmark' title='Permanent Link: Try a Little Frisson with Your Nonfiction'>Try a Little Frisson with Your Nonfiction</a></li>
<li><a href='http://www.sinandsyntax.com/blog/critiquing-ken-burns/' rel='bookmark' title='Permanent Link: Critiquing Ken Burns'>Critiquing Ken Burns</a></li>
</ol></p>]]></content:encoded>
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