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In Praise of
Lying: Fiction vs. Nonfiction
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
-- because I don’t know the answers to these questions. They paralyze
me. I much prefer the freedom of lying. There’s no wracking your brain
trying to remember what someone actually said, no sleepless nights
imagining the faces of the jury in the courtroom on the day you’re sued
for libel. Give me the bliss of pure invention.
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 -- dirty bombs, Avian flu, global warming,
sexual predators, identity theft -- yet very little to do. So we prepare
by gathering information. Reading about Avian flu can make us feel
proactive. It’s as if finding out the precise scale of an oncoming
tsunami will prevent it from laying waste, as if knowing the statistical
chances of a nuclear dirty bomb attack in the Manhattan subway system
will keep the terrorist from setting one off. Information is knowledge,
after all, and as we all know, knowledge is power.
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
-- in the fact that we can see into the past by looking through the
Hubble Space Telescope, for example -- but as a rule, pure information
does not supply the sublime experience that art offers. Facts may be
useful when you want to graph the distribution of convicted sexual
predators in your neighborhood, but they’re not a terribly effective way
to come to understand one of those predators, to begin to grasp not only
the suffering he has caused but also the suffering he endures.
This is where
literature comes in. Both memoir and fiction can offer wisdom, moments
of beauty, and -- corny as it sounds -- teach us how to be better
people. But the memoir writer limits herself to her own experience, to
what she knows. Writing what you know -- advice every beginning writer
receives -- can be a great way to get started, but ultimately, I find it
too limiting. I agree with John Gardner, who said you should write the
kind of story you know best, in other words, write what you like to
read. If you like to read realistic fiction about small Midwestern
towns, and you happen to have grown up in one, then you might be able to
do both. But what makes literature so rewarding is that it can take us
to places we’d never otherwise go. Writers inhabit the country of the
imagination -- the nation of image, as poet William Higginson likes to
say -- and one of imagination’s greatest virtues is its unfaithfulness.
Imagination rambles and roams. 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 are the things I love about writing
fiction. If I want, I can imagine the trials of a tribe of hunted
elephants in the African savanna (Barbara Gowdy’s The White Bone) or
inhabit the body of a hermaphrodite (Jeffrey Eugenides’ Middlesex). I
can tell all sorts of lies, be as unfaithful as I like to factual
truths, as long as I’m faithful to a different sort of truth: the
perennial emotional truths that permeate human experience, truths that
bring us closer not necessarily to power, but to wisdom. These are the
reasons I write fiction.
These, and the
fact that I have a crappy memory.
Copyright © 2006
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 (April 2006;
$24.95US/$35.00CAN; 0-399-15317-9) 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.
For more information, please visit
www.amyhassinger.com
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