“The fiction I’m most interested in has lines of reference to the real world. None of my stories really happened, of course. But there’s always something, some element, something said to me or that I witnessed, that may be the starting place. Here’s an example: ‘That’s the last Christmas you’ll ever ruin for us!’ I was drunk when I heard that, but I remembered it. And later, much later, when I was sober, using only that one line and other things I imagined, imagined so accurately that they could have happened, I made a story—‘A Serious Talk.’ But the fiction I’m most interested in, whether it’s Tolstoy’s fiction, Chekhov, Barry Hannah, Richard Ford, Hemingway, Isaac Babel, Ann Beattie, or Anne Tyler, strikes me as autobiographical to some extent. At the very least it’s referential. Stories long or short don’t just come out of thin air. I’m reminded of a conversation involving John Cheever. We were sitting around a table in Iowa City with some people and he happened to remark that after a family fracas at his home one night, he got up the next morning and went into the bathroom to find something his daughter had written in lipstick on the bathroom mirror: ‘D-e-r-e daddy, don’t leave us.’ Someone at the table spoke up and said, ‘I recognize that from one of your stories.’ Cheever said, ‘Probably so. Everything I write is autobiographical.’ Now of course that’s not literally true. But everything we write is, in some way, autobiographical. I’m not in the least bothered by ‘autobiographical’ fiction. To the contrary. On the Road. Céline. Roth. Lawrence Durrell in The Alexandria Quartet. So much of Hemingway in the Nick Adams stories. Updike, too, you bet. Jim McConkey. Clark Blaise is a contemporary writer whose fiction is out-and-out autobiography. Of course, you have to know what you’re doing when you turn your life’s stories into fiction. You have to be immensely daring, very skilled and imaginative and willing to tell everything on yourself. You’re told time and again when you’re young to write about what you know, and what do you know better than your own secrets? But unless you’re a special kind of writer, and a very talented one, it’s dangerous to try and write volume after volume on The Story of My Life. A great danger, or at least a great temptation, for many writers is to become too autobiographical in their approach to their fiction. A little autobiography and a lot of imagination are best.”
“A little autobiography and a lot of imagination are best.” I love that.
-
penumbrailles reblogged this from theparisreview
-
grassybrownie reblogged this from booklover
-
bellatrixs-evilcorner reblogged this from booklover
-
stephanous reblogged this from ek-tahyp
-
tenderkales likes this
-
ek-tahyp reblogged this from booklover
-
drawsomeless likes this
-
boredsincebirth likes this
-
xanthofile reblogged this from blueguitar
-
blakyokojones likes this
-
blueguitar reblogged this from kenhatter and added:
MY favorite WRITER died… is DEAD… I”m sure yours is, too.
-
kenhatter reblogged this from theparisreview
-
nainstella reblogged this from theparisreview
-
shadowpirate reblogged this from booklover
-
hedgehogandravenbooks reblogged this from booklover
-
adorkycoolkid reblogged this from booklover
-
muchmorerealthanlife likes this
-
marynelson8 reblogged this from theparisreview
-
bleedalkali likes this
-
mr-orange likes this
-
highlydisregarded reblogged this from bbook
-
fayeuhngnihnwah reblogged this from booklover
-
normanshapiro likes this
-
pinkcloudpaper reblogged this from booklover
-
123petals reblogged this from booklover
-
americananimal likes this
-
greatunexpectations likes this
-
abandonedfunhouse likes this
-
if-youre-feeling-sinister likes this
-
markabalos reblogged this from theparisreview
-
willheslin reblogged this from cammieee
-
enemgee reblogged this from booklover
-
dedaumier reblogged this from theparisreview
-
cammieee reblogged this from booklover and added:
Will!
-
beelockwood reblogged this from writersatwork
-
thecauseofmoredisauders likes this
-
flaschenpost-ajiri reblogged this from writersatwork
-
ilibertario likes this
-
olympialetan likes this
-
writersatwork reblogged this from theparisreview and added:
Raymond Carver
-
donotadjustyoureyes likes this
-
randyvigilla likes this
-
thundrcat likes this
-
withloveandsqualorrr likes this
-
lauradorable likes this
-
holly003 likes this
-
annjumar likes this
-
subjectpermanence likes this
-
wherethewitchesdance reblogged this from booklover
-
cisforsquaring likes this
- Show more notes





