I read the article about fake memoirs and I was pretty
amazed at the lengths people will go to to make money. Of course, we have all
heard about these books that are presented as fact but later are proven as
fiction but I really didn’t realize there were as many as what were listed in
the article. One of the books, Mutant Message
Down Under by Marlo Morgan, has always been one of my favorite books. I
read it many years ago when it first came out for a book club. I remember, back
then, it was merely confusing because it said it was fiction but it seemed so
real and I didn’t know there was any controversy. In fact, that year, I gave
the book to several people for Christmas. Everyone in our book club just went
with the fact that it was realistic fiction. I believe there was a foreword or
afterword that explained the situation but no one really questioned it. I had
forgotten this element of the book as the years have passed and was surprised
to see it on the list in the article.
I wonder a lot about the intention of these writers; are
they doing it for fame and money? Literary status? If they wanted to write a good
story, why not do just that and claim it as fiction? I understand better from
the reader’s side; if you claim it to be true, it had better be true. That is
why we are reading a “true story”; because we want something amazing and what
makes it amazing is that it is true! I’m sure most of these “true story”
readers are fiction fans as well and would probably like the book just as well
if it were fiction. It’s just that one tiny element of truth that makes the book
that much more interesting. And what makes us mad is when someone lies to us;
and not a little one that slips out but a premeditated, bold-faced lie that
took months or years to perfect.
Some of these untruths are a bit more acceptable than others
though. The list includes some books, like Mutant
Message, where the author, I believe, really is telling what they believe
is the truth and it doesn’t really hurt anyone. I never understood how this
book was hurting the aboriginals. Morgan simply relayed her time spent with
them and conveyed how wonderful they are. However, there are others that step
way over the line in my opinion. One of the best examples is portraying a holocaust
survivor; how hurtful and disrespectful to all holocaust survivors. Herman
Rosenblat, author of Angel At The Fence:
The True Story of a Love That Survived, on the other hand, is in fact a
Holocaust survivor and he only fabricated the love between himself and a young
girl during the Holocaust who later got married. True, I agree he could’ve just
written an awesome fictional love story and called it fiction but did he really
fabricate something so wrong? Maybe I can forgive him more since he is a
Holocaust survivor. But I think these fake memoirs have to be taken one at a
time to assess the damage and then we can go from there.
People will do anything to make a quick buck. But the cost of that is probably a headline, which is what happens to authors who create fake stories and claim they are real.
ReplyDeleteAs for the Holocaust one, I can add some sympathy since he is really a survivor. How could you place a book that is half true and half fiction? Would that be considered realistic fiction? That is a tough one.
Great Prompt response! Full points!
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