Mary Rosenblum: Welcome to our Wednesday Forum I wanted to talk about the differences between telling a real story -- personal narrative and memoir -- and telling a fiction story. There ARE differences, they're not identical. Some elements of story telling -- whether it's a real story or a fiction story -- are the same. You need to engage your readers and keep their attention all the way through. That's where craft comes in and it's pretty much the same, whether you're writing personal narrative or a murder mystery. The main difference between fiction and nonfiction is in reader expectations.
Readers of fiction have certain expectations from the story. If you don't meet those expectations, they are disappointed in the story. Readers of nonfiction have different expectations. In a fiction story, the readers want a clear conflict, a satisfying resolution. They want characters who are real and a sense of being sucked into a real world. In nonfiction, however, readers know that they're reading truth. This really happened, it isn't made up. We value truth in a very gut sense. That's what you strive for in fiction, after all. M We make the story seem so real that readers find themselves believing it. But in nonfiction, it's a given. : So we're content to enjoy less of a clear conflict and resolution in nonfiction. It's the truth that really hooks us, rather than a made up conflict and resolution that compels us.
How does this work
in SF, Mary, getting sucked into the real world of fairies, aliens etc?
Mary Rosenblum:
It works the same as with any other genre, jrp. Your readers willingly suspend
their disbelief. Okay,
you know that fairies probably don't exit, we're not living in habitats on the
moon, but you shut that out of your mind as you read and if the writing is
good, for a time, this is real for you. But in
nonfiction, readers don't have to suspend disbelief. You are telling
a real story.
Now that does not mean it's okay
to make a nonfiction story boring! That's where I see a lot of weakness among
my personal narrative students. Just because it really happened does not mean
it's compelling if you write it like a grocery list! You still want
to create the same rise and fall of dramatic energy, even if you're writing
about Thanksgiving dinner with the dreaded Momsey cousins. If you were
writing a fiction story, you'd need a clear external conflict and character
conflict to resolve and that conflict and resolution is what drives the story
-- that's the core.
In the personal narrative version, the
readers want to be entertained by the story, but the fact that it really
happened and we can relate to those events carry the weight of the story. We
don't need that clear conflict and resolution in order to feel satisfied. This
is the main reason why novice writers who try to write a real story as a 'fiction'
story generally don't succeed.
I see that a lot.
A student wants to write about past
experiences, but wants to change things a bit, so he/she decides to do it as
fiction. But
because that author wants to keep events real, generally, the resulting story
falls between fiction and nonfiction and splats on the floor, so to
speak. It might be compelling as a nonfiction real story. It’s not real,
since the student has added to it but it lacks a sufficient conflict and
resolution to satisfy the fiction readers. Since it's going to be called
fiction, the readers will be fiction readers not nonfiction readers. So the novice
writer has written a fiction story for nonfiction readers.
And that generally does not work.
My advice is, if you want to tell a real
life story, make it a real life story. If you want to write a fiction story,
make it a fiction story. If
you want to use real life events to create a fiction story, start with a strong
conflict and resolution and use your real life events to create realistic
people and a realistic world, but do not try to stick to a complete and
unbroken chain of mostly real events. Remember...if you call it fiction, your
nonfiction readers are not going to read it, so don't write for them. Let's look at
an example.. Let’s say our novice writer has a brother who got in trouble a
lot as a kid. He ran away, wasn't respectful to his parents, ended up in jail
for shoplifting, and seemed to have learned his lesson, but eventually got back
into trouble later.
Written as a personal narrative, there's
plenty here to engage readers.
We get the writer's take on what it was
like to grow up in the shadow of Bad Brother, and we have the insights into how
his parents really tried and maybe were not to blame for his behavior. So there
are some universals here for readers to engage with (gee, maybe it wasn't all
my fault that my daughter got busted for shoplifting -- gee, I'm not the only
one who felt cheated when my big brother's problems always got the attention). And
you have the engaging craft -- vivid characters (who are real), vivid
description, nice pacing and rising and falling dramatic tension. Very nice
personal narrative piece, very saleable.
Okay, so our writer decides that the
family will not like to see their dirty laundry aired, and she will turn this
into a fiction story. Now she
tells the same story, changes the
names, maybe embroiders some of her Bad Brother's exploits, so that he's now
part of a nasty local gang, figuring she'll make it more dramatic. But
essentially it's the same story.
And as fiction, it falls flat.
Why?
It's simply a narrative of Bad Brother's
exploits. He gets in trouble a lot, but there's no central conflict that gets
resolved. He
goes to jail, seems to have learned his lesson, but did not. The story sort of
peters out with the sense that he's just going to keep on getting in more
trouble. The fiction readers came to this story with an expectation. We're going to
meet this troubled kid, we see what he needs to fix, and he's going to fix it.
We have a central conflict and satisfying resolution. Bad Brother struggles,
finds some way to save himself, and will save himself. Or maybe the
story is the counselor who struggled to save Bad Brother. We see why this
counselor needs to do this. He either succeeds or he fails and learns something
about himself from this failure that will change him in a satisfying way. Or the sister
is the main character in the story. She is clearly badly affected by the Bad
Brother, but at the climax finds a way to save herself.
Again, satisfying conflict and
resolution in three different forms. BUT... that's not what the novice writer
wrote. The novice writer fictionalized events but did not change the main arc
of the story. There is no satisfying conflict and resolution here, so those
fiction readers who expect it, are not satisfied. Same events, same vivid
description, but the story arc...as a FICTIONAL story arc....is weak. The hard
part for most novice writers is to make the big changes that are required in
order to make that real life event work as fiction. Bad Brother never did have
a good counselor who cared. Sister
didn't make any big changes in her life. Bad Brother
just went on getting into trouble and then 'reforming' and is now doing 30 to
life in the state pen.
Because we DO value the truth, it's very hard for us to yank it out of real life events sufficiently to make it work as a fiction story. We know it's truth so we want to leave it there, recognizing its power. However, if we write it as ‘fiction’ then the readers think it's all fiction. So they expect fiction conventions.
That does not mean that some real
life events can't make good fiction stories. The boy scout troop that gets
lost and is found by a heroic effort on the part of a search dog and handler
will make a great fiction story.
You can use the real events and simply
make the characters more interesting. But it would be even stronger as a
nonfiction narrative, so why change it? Lots of fiction today is based on real
life situations, but the authors have been able to distance themselves enough
from those real life situations that they can make the story work as a fiction
story, changing events and characters as needed. That is the hard part. Most of the
time, the novice writer simply can't get that much distance from the events and
it becomes too difficult to sacrifice that truth that matters so much to us. 'It
really happened that way' is NO excuse for fiction. NONE!
'It really happened that way' is only
valid in nonfiction.
Remember... readers value the truth a
lot more than a really good made up story. That's why nonfiction outsells
fiction by such a large margin.
Truth can be
stranger then fiction but not necessarily as exciting?
Mary Rosenblum:
And not as believable, jrp. Real people do seemingly unlikely things all the
time. But in fiction, you have to make their motivations plausible. Not so in
nonfiction.
"The difference
between fiction and non-fiction is that fiction must be absolutely
believable." -Mark Twain.
Mary Rosenblum:
Once again, 'Mark Twain' come through with the perfect words. LOL That's it,
exactly. I have seen many news items where I shake my head, muttering 'I could
never get away with that in a story'! And I couldn't! But it really happened.
Hmmm we’re voyeurs?
Mary Rosenblum:
Well, duh, jrp....been stuck in a traffic jam as people slow down to eyeball
the accident across the center divider on the freeway lately? We are incredible
voyeurs. That's what fiction AND personal narrative are all about. And that's why
realism is so important in fiction. The more it seems like real life, the more
your readers engage. The real key to effective use of real life in fiction is
to distance yourself so much from those events that you don't bat an eye at
completely changing things.
The, ah, big conflict and resolution...
Mary Rosenblum:
In fiction, yes. Not needed in nonfiction...'the truth' is enough. For those
of you who read both fiction and personal narrative, think about how you read
and what satisfies you.
That truth can be cause
for liable...if it is someone else's.
Mary Rosenblum:
Well, that's always an issue if you're writing about real events. Depends on
what you write. Remember...libel means that your words have damaged the other
person in some concrete way. He can't get a job now that you have written
about how he's a child molester, for example. I personally suggest that you
ALWAYS change names, jrp. It can be very unnerving to realize that thousands of
strangers now know about your behavior at that infamous Thanksgiving dinner.
But of course,
people who know the story will know that it's you. :-)
Mary Rosenblum:
Of course. But as I said, just writing about real life events is not libel. Saying
something that harms that person in a significant way - they can't get jobs,
they lose business -- is what a libel award is based on. And the truth can have
consequences outside of the rule of law. An American who
was a crime reporter in Japan for many years has written a memoir that details
a lot of the Yakuza doings, and he's now got a price on his head. Your brother
in law can punch you out after that narrative about the family Thanksgiving
dinner.
No libel suit needed here!
But very few memoir, relatively
speaking, are written about crimes or behavior that could result in a libel
suit or a hit-man. Mostly
it's about family and friends, and then it's just a matter of 'will these
people ever talk to me again'?
That
is a built in NF risk. My story (one of them) is real, the perp has passed away
but there are family members who would recognize events.
Mary Rosenblum:
Any time you write about real life issues, people who also know about them are
going to recognize them.
I'm curious how to
fictionalize extraordinary or fantastical EVENTS, not so much the people
involved? How do you make those events into plausible plot issues?
Mary Rosenblum:
Gail, that can be a challenge. Two issues are in play here. One -- out of the
context of real history, the significance diminishes. If you write
about a leader getting assassinated, it's not likely to have the same impact as
writing a piece about 'who really shot JFK'.
The second issue is the one I touched on
before: Readers have to believe it. If the real life event is too fantastic,
that can be hard.
(I was thinking of the
paranormal when I posed that question.)
Mary Rosenblum:
Same thing, Gail. A book sailing gently across the room in a musty old library
can be a feature article for Ghosts Magazine, since you got the cell
phone shot. But
it's not going to excite the paranormal reader. That reader has
different expectations, remember? The paranormal readers want impressive
events.
Yet, there still must be
that dramatic arc, conflict and resolution, etc.?
Mary Rosenblum:
Yep, Gail. If you want to write for the fiction readers, that paranormal event
is going to have to be second to a strong conflict and resolution. If you're
writing for Ghosts Magazine, it can be the central event that carries
the piece. Trying
to turn real life into fiction without significantly changing it is usually difficult.
It can be done, but most of the time, it’s a whole lot easier to just make up
the fiction story and use the real life events to write a strong personal
narrative.
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