Friday, July 5, 2013

Blending Fact and Fiction


Writers are frequently asked: "How much of your fiction is based on the facts of your life?"

If we follow the advice commonly given to writers, i.e., “Write what you know”,  the answer to that would have to be "a lot". What most of us know best is our own life. We may not understand it, but we know it. It’s the world we inhabit on a daily basis. So, it’s good advice–and a good place to start. But how do we do that? Most of us don't live large, heroic lives, so how do we shape our small experiences into interesting stories? The story, Generation Unto Generation, contained in the collection A Perfect Wedding - http://amzn.to/z5Dko7 - is probably as close to an autobiography as anything I'll ever write, but even that isn't 100% fact.


I don’t claim to speak for all writers, but here’s how it works for me. I choose an experience that I find meaningful and, needing to share my feelings, I write about it. I portray it as faithfully as I can, but the wonder doesn’t come through. The words don’t do justice to the feeling. It’s mundane. So I embellish it. Add a little drama. It’s too personal. Will readers be able to relate to it? I change some of the details, hoping to make it more universal. Punch it up a bit. More details. More drama. Almost without realizing it, I take the essence of the experience and transform it into something new, something that I hope will convey my sense of wonder. My experience becomes fiction.

A variation of that first piece of advice is: “Write what you want to know.” More good advice.

Here, I might start with an event that makes no sense to me. I take an inexplicable action and try to understand it by creating a fictional scenario that explores the event from various angles. I make up characters who represent different facets of the puzzle and try to imagine it from their conflicting points of view. For me, one of the joys of writing fiction is immersing myself in another personality, whether it's the heroic figure I’d like to become or the villain I won’t let myself be. Still, even the most bizarre characters and events that I make up come from somewhere–something I’ve seen or heard or read about.

There’s another option to writing about what you want to know. Suppose I decide to set my story in a time or place completely foreign to the world I inhabit. With enough research, that’s possible. I can look up facts to make any setting credible. However, I still have to use my imagination to blend the characters created from the world as I know it into the setting dictated by the facts of a different environment.

Whatever type of story I’m writing, by the time that first germ of an idea has been molded into something I’m willing to share, I have a hard time drawing the line between fact and fiction. All I can hope is that, by blending the two, I’ve captured at least a bit of that elusive thing called truth.

I find that the more I write, the less I rely on personal experience and the more I use my imagination. The first piece of fiction that I ever had published was a short story called All Is Calm. It’s about a family celebrating the holidays, filled with the stress that comes when you combine diverse personalities and traditions and . . . well, let’s just say that it’s based on some of the details of my family with quite a few invented details thrown in. That story is included in the included in the collection Beyond the Fairy Light - http://amzn.to/HYZREn 







12 comments:

Sheila Claydon said...

Love it Sandy and it made think about my own writing. I overhear some conversation or observe a situation and start to weave a 'what if' story about it in my head. Often this will happen while I'm travelling which is why so many of my stories are set in foreign countries. I have been there, the story is based on some sort of truth but not mine. I'm just the observer and translator. I love how we are all so different in our approach and I love your books.

Sandy Cody said...

Thanks, Sheila, for adding your two cents. I also love the differences in the way writers interpret the the little scenes they see. That's one of the things that makes reading such a pleasure.

Sydell Voeller said...

Very enjoyable, Sandy! Like you, I realize there's a bit of "me" in all my stories.

Sandy Cody said...

I guess that's why your stories have such heart, Sydell. Thanks for stopping by.

Sofie Couch said...

And the truth is often stranger than fiction. I find myself "toning down" the reality, because no sensible reader could suspend their disbelief. :) Great article!

Sandy Cody said...

Lol, Sofie. You obviously lead a more exciting life than I do, which doesn't surprise me, having read your recent post on this blog.

Carol Hutchens said...

What a wonderful post. Thank you, Sandy. Your ideas make it sound so easy.

Carol Hutchens said...

What a wonderful post. Thank you, Sandy. Your ideas make it sound so easy.

Sandy Cody said...

Carol, I'm laughing. It's never easy but, as they say about another endeavor "It's the hardest job you'll ever love." Thanks for commenting.

Beate Boeker said...

When I read your stories, I can always tell that you are noting loads of little details taken from real life - the way families interact, how they react to each other, due to long-time habits and past problems and experiences. It doesn't have to be a big bang to make a book interesting. Families provide plenty of fodder, and I love your novels!

Sandy Cody said...

Thanks, Beate. I so agree that our families provide plenty to write about.

Titus said...

Great!