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Your Life As Story:
Writing Narrative Nonfiction
The Truth about Memoir

by Lisa Dale Norton
May 2008

Lisa Dale Norton
Lisa Dale Norton
Lisa Dale Norton is a regular monthly Authorlink columnist. She is nationally recognized as a writing instructor with a passion for story. Read more about Lisa.

 

Note to my readers: I'm taking a break in the planned order of columns. Tips about using dialogue to create characters will come in June. Recent events in the news compel me to speak about memoir hoaxes and the impact they have on our work as memoirists.

"That act of misrepresenting one's intentions as a storyteller is different than the act of crafting a truthful recollection of life experience..."
—Norton

The Truth About Memoir
 
Most of you who follow the vicissitudes of the literary world know about memoirs that have been exposed as false. There have been several books since the rise of memoir that have drawn media attention, primarily questions about details of fact.
 
The top fully blew off the pot in 2006 with James Frey's "A Million Little Pieces," which was first pitched to publishers as a novel and when it didn't sell was then repitched as a memoir. It sold, and the rest of the story is now legend. Since then there have been a variety of lesser kerfuffles.
 
But in the news in flashing neon this spring have been some big bummers: "Love and Consequences" (released in March and immediately recalled) by Margaret Jones, aka Peggy Seltzer, and "Misha: A Memoir of the Holocaust Years" by Misha Defonseca published over 10 years ago and discovered last month to be an invented story.
 
We can't deny the reality of what these writers have done. Flat out: They have misrepresented their intentions as storytellers.
 
I want to be clear here: That act of misrepresenting one's intentions as a storyteller is different than the act of crafting a truthful recollection of life experience, wherein we reconstruct our past with narrative, using the best of our abilities to recall the truth of the moments as they present themselves through the veil of memory.

"Making a personal truth out of the material of memory is not lying... "
—Norton

Making a personal truth out of the material of memory is not lying; it is not the same as leading your editor and publisher to believe that you lived a series of events that simply did not happen.

"Where do you stand in the gulf between factual truth and emotional truth... "
—Norton

I fear a backlash against wonderfully written stories, a slap at all writers who feel drawn to the genre of memoir. Consequently, it is our responsibility as narrative nonfiction writers to pull together around this issue and answer for ourselves two key questions:
 
1) Just what are the rights and responsibilities of the memoirist? These are rooted in a clear understanding of what the form can best achieve as a genre, both for writers and readers.
 
2) Where do you stand in the gulf between factual truth and emotional truth, in that Grand Canyon of artistic license between getting every fact correct at the expense of some deeper resonant meaning for the soul, and seeking a connection between individual and universal experience through the arc of story and its consequent demands, at the sacrifice of a few factual details?

"Memoir is the faithful representation and weaving together of the Shimmering Images... "
—Norton

These questions get to the root of ethical issues confronting us as literary artists.
 
There is a difference between a bedrock kind of soul truth, achieved through the artful and honest exploration of the human experience, and the reeling out of a series of events that are perhaps artful but wholly untrue as lived experiences
 
Memoir is the faithful representation and weaving together of the Shimmering Images of our lives‹those iconic memories that gird the reality we have come to call our "story."
 
Memoir is not an invented tale of things that never happened to you.
 
Bear toward that harbor in the memoir storm and all shall be well.

About
Lisa Dale Norton
Lisa Dale Norton's new book about memoir, SHIMMERING IMAGES: A HANDY LITTLE GUIDE TO WRITING MEMOIR, will be released by St. Martin 's Press in Spring '08. She is the author of Hawk Flies Above: Journey to the Heart of the Sandhills (Picador USA/St. Martin 's Press), a work combining memoir and nature writing. Lisa teaches for the UCLA Writers' Extension Program and speaks nationally on the power of story and the process of writing your own. She lives in Santa Fe. www.lisadalenorton.com



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