Truth in fiction
There's been plenty of talk lately about truth in fiction. Most recently in an article by Alexis Nowicki, in which she describes the experience of having very specific details and events from her life woven into a short story that went viral - 'Cat Person', by Kristen Roupenian. Roupenian has since apologised, and admits she could at least have changed the identifying details.
When I read books as a kid, and even as a young adult, I naively believed that all fiction was purely imagined, dreamed up by the writer. I was amazed at how authors could make something invented seem so true.
I was probably in my late thirties (and still a reader only) before I began to realise that writers often stole snippets or great swathes or even almost entire narratives from their own lives, or from lives around them. I discovered that one of my favourite novels around that time, The Spare Room, was actually written from a real-life experience, in which Helen Garner helped nurse a terminally ill friend until the friend passed away.
I can understand the attraction of using actual people or events in fiction. It's a way of grounding the piece in reality, and can function as a jumping-off point. My first story written as an adult was in a workshop run by the fabulous Edwina Shaw. She urged us all to think of something important that had once happened (to us or someone close to us) then write that story. Next, she suggested, add something that didn't ever happen.
Even then, though, I must have naturally steered away from my using my own life in fiction. Instead I wrote the story of a suicide attempt in my family's history. I didn't know many of the details, so even in writing this 'real' event, there was a great deal of fiction. I embellished on the event, as Edwina instructed. This approach definitely helped spark creativity, as well as helping me understand how horrific it must have been for everyone involved.
Now, as my short story collection nears being sent to print, I've been thinking about the elements of truth in my fiction - wondering what I've revealed of myself, or others.
There are very few straightforward truths in the narratives. I've never been thrown from a snowmobile. I've never been a teenage boy obsessed with playing guitar. I've never cheated on my husband. But there are realities in the smaller details, and in emotions. I have heard the sound of a goods train at night, for the past twenty-one years. Like the young girl, Lana, in Christmas Party, I was often taken to teachers' parties as a kid in Canada, where even at the age of seven or eight, I was aware of the undercurrents of heavy flirting between adults. And like Nadine in Boxing Day, I was once in a relationship that came to feel increasingly wrong.
Despite my protestations of 'it's practically all fiction', I'm sure there's more of myself on the page than I think. Some of my attitudes or emotions or political views will have crept into stories, inevitably. It's occurred to me that my female characters are probably better-behaved, overall, than the male characters, showing my female bias. And I'm definitely obsessed with parent-child relationships.
But I can honestly say that none of my characters are people I know. They are all completely themselves, doing good, bad and commonplace things. Their views are frequently different to mine. Their actions do not belong to me, or to anyone in my life. Part of what delights me most about writing fiction is how the characters build themselves, come to life, say and do things as if of their own accord. To me, they're entirely new people.
Of course there are truths in fiction. But equally, from fiction comes truth.