Fiction, non-fiction and creativity – an interview with writer and academic Bill Hughes

hand writingWelcome to a new interview in my series on creativity in non-fiction writing, and today we’re talking to Bill Hughes, who I first encountered via a mutual friend on Facebook and who has been hugely encouraging about my own writing, specifically my research project. He’s even promised to explain some remote bits of literary theory to me one of these days. Bill’s achieved something not many people do, going back to studying after another career and gaining a PhD. But as well as academic writing, he started off working on fiction and he’s very interested in poetry, so covers both aspects of writing in which we’re interested here. Let’s find out what Bill thinks about creativity in non-fiction writing, and whether he agrees with most of the other contributors to this series …

Hello, Bill, and welcome to this occasional interview series. First, please tell us a bit about yourself and your books

I’m an IT developer who has recently gained a PhD in English Literature. I’m now publishing academic research and aiming to get a research post. I am working on the proposal for the monograph based on my research, Conversation, Discourse, and the Dialogue in the Formation of the English Novel: The Commerce of Light. I have, however, had other academic articles published (or awaiting publication) in books and journals. I’m also co-editor of and contributor to ‘Open Graves, Open Minds’: Representations of Vampires and the Undead from the Enlightenment to the Present Day, ed. by Sam George and Bill Hughes (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2013). And recently I’ve rediscovered writing poetry; I’m preparing a collection and aiming to have it published.

How did you start writing, and which came first, fiction or non-fiction?

I wrote imaginative fiction even as a child. I always wanted to be a writer—I read a lot, was good with words; I was also often praised by teachers for my writing, so that helped for me. Our house always had books—a strange mixture of classics and pulp fiction, and I read them all indiscriminately. My mum—who was a tremendous influence on my life—made up stories for us and was a lover of Dickens, so I absorbed that early on. Later, I wrote (as many bookish teenagers do) introspective, pretentious poetry in my teens and at university.

As an IT developer for the past 30 years, I’ve done a fair amount of technical writing. Programmers notoriously hate doing this; I get laughed at for saying how much I love it.

Then, about 20 years ago, I did an MA in Cultural Studies, but taking most of my modules from Literature (my first degree had been in Philosophy and Literature). This led me to doing a part-time PhD in eighteenth-century English literature, which I was awarded in 2010. Since then, I‘ve been pursuing that research and writing conference papers and journal articles. But I also got sidetracked into research on contemporary vampire fiction and paranormal romance, which I’m also writing and publishing on. I’m joint editor of a collection of articles on this and of a special issue of the academic journal Gothic Studies. From my work in this area, I’ve recently been appointed to the editorial board of a new journal, Monstrum, for research into monsters and monstrosity in culture and will be co-editing the inaugural issue.

Did you always want to write fiction as well, or was this a relatively late development?

Yes, always. I’ve had grand ideas for novels several times. But I’ve always been both lazy and over-ambitious so the epics that I planned never got written. However, a bad accident, illness, and various sad things in the past year or so have led me to write a very long, sustained, ambitious (and possibly unreadable) piece of poetry.

I recently blogged about finding that writing non-fiction was still “creative”. Do you agree, or is only fiction writing truly creative?

Of course there’s a sense in which all writing is creative. You’re adding something to the repository of human artefacts  that wasn’t there before. But—and this will probably not please everyone—I think there’s a danger in trivialising the word by applying it too uncritically. As with any word, it loses meaning if you allow it to be all-embracing. So my technical writing isn’t really creative, though I’m exercising choices there over structure and vocabulary (sometimes in a manner inappropriately baroque and literary for my readership!). But it’s assembly rather than creation, I’d say.

Academic writing—in literary studies, at least—has more of creativity about it. It’s an individual exploration of the language that you’re analysing, and a bringing forth of new ideas and perspectives into the world. And yet, it’s parasitic upon an original in a way; I’d rather say that it has an element of creativity rather than calling it creative writing. (Although Oscar Wilde’s idea of the critic as artist and recent notions of intertextuality can unsettle that distinction somewhat.) But I’d reserve the term ‘creative writing’ for fiction, poetry, and drama.

I’ve heard it said that memoir should be considered as “creative non-fiction” – do you agree with that description? How do you think writing memoir differ from writing fiction on the one hand and non-fiction on the other?

I’m strangely uninterested in biography or memoir as genres—I rarely read it, for some reason. So I’m not sure that I can answer these questions in much depth. I would think, though, that despite the craft of shaping that inevitably takes place and the skill in using language involved, the more literal and accurate biography or memoir is, the less you could call it ‘creative’. But good biographers may give you an insight—or the illusion of insight—into their subject’s characters; is that creativity? I don’t really know, and it raises many philosophical questions. And the best memoirs are probably outrageously, creatively dishonest! And I would say that imaginative fiction, if it uses material from memoir at all, is the most creative when it distances itself from the original, transforming it to the point of its becoming irrelevant. (That’s why detailed biographical criticism rarely sheds much light on texts as literature.)

If you use your own life in your fiction, was writing a memoir different from doing that?

I’ll be able to speak with more authority on this when I’ve actually written one of my many half-conceived novels!

Have you got anything else you want to add about creativity and writing (with particular regard to non-fiction)?

I should qualify what I’ve said above by reference to, say, writing philosophy, or even original scientific writing. Something is being created here. But I would still argue that this shouldn’t be confused with aesthetic creativity; perhaps ‘discovery’ is better than ‘creation’ here.

Tell us where we can find your books!
You can find our edited collection on vampire fiction at:
http://www.manchesteruniversitypress.co.uk/cgi-bin/indexer?product=9780719089411
Details of most of my other publications are on my Academia web page (a few are still awaiting publication).

I loved this detailed and very thoughtful pondering on the subject, and actually it crystallised what I was thinking – that true non-fiction writing such as my own is, indeed, creative, but not creative in quite the same way as true fiction. Maybe memoir does fall in between the two a little more, as does the original scientific writing and philosophy that Bill mentions. I like the ideas of ‘discovery’ and ‘synthesis’ and am glad that we have found different viewpoints in the series as a whole.

You can read new interviews in the series, either by subscribing to this blog (see the links in the top right if you’re viewing on a PC or on the drop-down menu if you’re reading on a phone or tablet) or clicking on the “non-fiction creativity” tag at the top of this post, which will give you access to all the interviews published so far, as well. Happy reading!

My own books are all firmly in the non-fiction area, but I do involve aspects of my own life and experience to make them more accessible and welcoming. Take a look by exploring the links on this page, or by visiting the books pages.

Fiction, non-fiction and creativity – an interview with author Alastair Henry

hand writingWelcome to a new interview in my series on creativity in non-fiction writing, and today we’re meeting writer Alastair Henry, who was inspired by his post-retirement travels to write an autobiography and co-write a book about his volunteering adventures to help others to make the right choices and to inspire them to go out into the world and help other people. Here, Alastair shares his story and we have a bonus section on the special and interesting way that he now takes his own books on the road!

Hello, Alistair, and thank you for taking part in this series. So, tell me a bit about yourself and your books.

I followed the London Life Insurance “Freedom 55’ plan and retired at the age of 57. But, disillusioned with the passivity of it all, I returned to the workforce with a small First Nations band in a remote community in the NWT. Cultural differences and a challenging environment ignited fresh perspectives, inspired a new way of being and fueled my aspirations for the future. I went in to Lutsel K’e as a hard core businessman and came out two years later as an advocate for marginalized people. Although my autobiography “Awakening in the Northwest Territories” spans sixty years, the core of the story takes place in the N.W.T.

Motivated about helping others less fortunate, I went to Bangladesh for two years as a volunteer when I came out of the north, and two years later met Candas. We met one day by chance, fell in love, and with a shared passion to improve the lives of others, set off on a new path of adventure in travel and volunteering. We shed our material possessions and exchanged our comfortable Canadian lifestyle to live a simpler life in Kingston, Jamaica; Georgetown, Guyana; and the Eco-Lodges in the Rupununi Rain Forest, while volunteering with local non-governmental organizations. On our time off, we explored Tobago and Antigua on roads less traveled. We co-wrote “Go For It – Volunteering Adventures on Roads Less Traveled” as a way to share our experiences and learnings in the hope they inspire other Boomers to “GO FOR IT.”

How did you start writing, and which came first, fiction or non-fiction?

When I went to the N.W.T., my daughter gave me a journal and these words: “Write in this, dad because I want to know what it’s like to live up there.” I did write, initially out of a sense of obligation, but then I got into the habit of writing every night for the next two years. When I left the north, I immediately went to Costa Rica for a month to enter the journals into Word and then worked away at converting the journals into more of a story. I titled my finished ms. “White Man On The Land,” and gave it to my children. Other people read and enjoyed it, but commented that it begged the questions of who was this man who went to Lutsel K’e and what did he do after he left the north. I continued to write and rewrite, and went back sixty years to tell the story because everything in life is interconnected. I felt I had to start at the beginning to fully realize and reveal who I was. In 2013, eight years after I first wrote my diaries, I published my autobiography.

Did I always want to write? No. Had my daughter not given me a journal I probably would have not become an author.

I recently blogged about finding that writing non-fiction was still “creative”. Do you agree, or is only fiction writing truly creative?

I believe writing a memoir can be just as creative as writing fiction if you approach it that way. The only difference is you are using facts from your memory rather than creations from your imagination. The rest of the writing is about how you tell the story and that’s the truly creative aspect of writing. In many ways, one has to be even more creative, because you can’t fabricate people and settings to enhance your story – you must find ways to describe your recollections that will be enjoyable to readers.

I was amazed at how much detail there were in my memories when I stopped, dwelt and delved into my cranial archives. I wandered around in my memories using all of my senses – What did I smell? What did I feel? Who else was there? Was it rainy or sunny? What was the backstory to that memory, etc., etc.?

It was cathartic. Life is a journey from birth to death and everything in it is interconnected. For every effect there is a cause, but most of us don’t think too earnestly about this. Reflecting and thinking about our past reveals the causes, effects and outcomes that shaped our lives. In my case, my childhood was most impacted by two factors: my parent’s strict Victorian code of behaviour for children and a heavy religious schooling that resulted in me being shy, insecure and confused by the time I was a teenager. And when I reflected upon my time in the north with the Dene, I saw that I had metamorphosed from a cold-hearted businessman to a warm-hearted advocate for people’s rights.

Had I not embarked upon writing my memoir I would not have the mental clarity and the understanding of myself that I have today. And nor would my children have an account of their father’s life that they can hand down to successive generations.

Tell us about the special way you get to travel, meet people and sell your books!

In addition to online sales that come about through my involvement in social media, I present an audio/visual package – book readings accompanied by relevant photos and a sound track – to various groups throughout S.W. Ontario, such as Seniors Centers, Retirement Residences, Service Clubs, as well as Home Shows –they make a refreshing change from Tupperware and Mary Kay parties!

I’m most fortunate in that I have many photos that correspond to my writings which have enabled me to put together these A/V presentations for both books. Because the settings and reading excerpts are so different from everyday life in Canada, the presentations are received with much interest and enjoyment and lively discussions always follow.

This is now what we do in our retirement. We have become entertainers and no longer view ourselves as authors reading from a book. We did over 90 presentations in 2014 and plan to do more in 2015, including a six-week road trip from our home in Ontario to Newfoundland, stopping along the way  here and there for two or three days to do some readings. It’s a wonderful activity for us because we so enjoy meeting people –our future readers – and learning about their story.

Thank you for all those thoughts and your view of creativity in non-fiction, as well as the info on how you enjoy promoting your books to the full. Finally, please tell us where we can find you and your books!

My books are both available on Amazon, via my author page or their individual pages:

Awakening in the North

Go for It

You can read new interviews in the series, either by subscribing to this blog (see the links in the top right if you’re viewing on a PC or on the drop-down menu if you’re reading on a phone or tablet) or clicking on the “non-fiction creativity” tag at the top of this post, which will give you access to all the interviews published so far, as well. Happy reading!

My own books are all firmly in the non-fiction area, but I do involve aspects of my own life and experience to make them more accessible and welcoming. Take a look by exploring the links on this page, or by visiting the books pages.

Fiction, non-fiction and creativity – an interview with author Marguerite “Markie” Madden

hand writingWelcome to a new interview in my series on creativity in non-fiction writing. First of all, an apology for the delay in posting this series of interviews, if you’ve subscribed and/or are reading these in real time. I was very busy with work, then on holiday, then horribly ill with flu, and all of my blogs went on the back burner while I recovered and caught up with work. But we’re back now – hooray! – and here’s a chat with Marguerite “Markie” Madden on the tricky topic of non-fiction and creativity. She’s written fiction, non-fiction AND memoir, so is ideally placed to enter the discussion with knowledge and experience from all sides!

Hello, Marguerite, and welcome to the interview series! First of all, please tell us a bit about yourself and your books.

Hello, Liz! I’m married, and the mother of two teenagers as well as 3 rescue dogs and a horse. I was born in Midland Texas, but I grew up in Flushing, Michigan. Now I’m currently living out in the middle of nowhere, a small farm town called Fisk in Missouri. I’m also a cancer survivor, just last year, leukemia specifically.

How did you start writing, and which came first, fiction or non-fiction?

I began writing in grade school. I think I was in 4th grade, anyway, the teacher would come around and make a squiggle on our notebook, and the assignment was to finish the squiggle into a drawing and write a story about it. I wrote my first “complete” book starting in high school, and it became my first published novel, Once Upon a Western Way. Fiction came first for me, and the non-fiction was fairly recent.

Did you always want to write a memoir or was this a relatively late development?

I never really planned to write a memoir, that was a recent development after my battle with cancer. The small act of a friend request on Facebook while I was sick ended up getting me published in print (read My Butterfly Cancer for that story!) and the rest is, as they say, that!

I recently blogged about finding that writing non-fiction was still “creative”. Do you agree, or is only fiction writing truly creative?

Non-fiction is certainly creative, not that you’re making up a story (usually) because it’s really happened to you, or you’ve put in a lot of work on research, but writing non-fiction can come across as either dry and boring, or interesting, depending on HOW it’s written. Take my horse care guide, Keeping a Backyard Horse, for example. It’s told from the point of view of my horse, which I think engages the reader a bit more while they learn the facts of horse husbandry.

I’ve heard it said that memoir should be considered as “creative non-fiction” – do you agree with that description? How do you think writing memoir differs from writing fiction on the one hand and non-fiction on the other?

In my opinion, a memoir is just non-fiction; if you were to classify a memoir as creative fiction, why not any non-fiction? As I said earlier, the way any non-fiction is written IS creative (or should be, anyway), so I don’t really think there’s much difference!

If you use your own life in your fiction, was writing a memoir different from doing that?

Yes, a memoir was a little different to write, as opposed to my Once Upon a Western Way. The main character is, of course, me, to an extent, and her better half is my best friend from growing up. But in a fiction, I can make the characters do and be anything I want them to, where in my memoir, I had to tell the story of my life as it was, rather than embellishing it for creativity’s sake. Oddly enough, my memoir is currently my best-seller, whereas I expected that my novel would be.

Have you got anything else you want to add about creativity and writing (with particular regard to non-fiction)?

Non-fiction (with the exception of a memoir) must be researched carefully, or be about something which you already have a good working knowledge of. But that doesn’t mean that you can’t be creative in the way you write non-fiction. Just look at it this way: which would you prefer to read, a non-fiction full of boring and overwhelming details, or one that’s easy to read and engaging? If you can find a way to make math fun, for example, you’ll come across to your readers in a better way.

Thank you so much for your insights. Finally, please tell us where we can find your books!

All my books can be found in print on Amazon (my author page), at Barnes and Noble, and at the CreateSpace website, and digitally for the Kindle (at the moment, they’re Kindle exclusive, but will soon be available on Smashwords for Nook and iBooks as well). I’ve also seen them on Wordery.com and many other online retailers. My Butterfly Cancer on Amazon. Once Upon a Western Way on Amazon. Keeping a Backyard Horse on Amazon. My Smashwords page. My Facebook page. My blog and my website.

You can read new interviews in the series, either by subscribing to this blog (see the links in the top right if you’re viewing on a PC or on the drop-down menu if you’re reading on a phone or tablet) or clicking on the “non-fiction creativity” tag at the top of this post, which will give you access to all the interviews published so far, as well. Happy reading!

My own books are all firmly in the non-fiction area, but I do involve aspects of my own life and experience to make them more accessible and welcoming. Take a look by exploring the links on this page, or by visiting the books pages.

Fiction, non-fiction and creativity – an interview with author Steve Dunham

hand writingWelcome to a new interview in my series on creativity in non-fiction writing, and today we’re welcoming Steve Dunham, editor and writer. I “met” Steve when we did a review exchange – he reviewed my “How I Survived My First Year of Full-Time Self-Employment” on his blog, and I reviewed his “The Editor’s Companion” on mine. Like me, Steve is primarily a non-fiction writer, but that doesn’t stop him having some good and interesting things to say about creativity – he even creatively added to my standard list of questions (which is perfectly acceptable, of course!).

Hello, Steve. So, tell me a bit about yourself and your books.

I’ve been working as an editor since 1981 and writing for publication a bit longer than that. “The Editor’s Companion”, published in 2014, is based on what I’ve learned and collected in that time. My friend and agent Dave Fessenden (also an editor and writer) pestered me to start the Editor’s Companion blog, which is new, too. I had put almost everything I could think of about editing into the book, so it’s been kind of hard to come up with new blog content as well. I’ve been involved in public transportation advocacy (citizens’ groups) almost as long as I’ve been writing and editing, so that’s a subject I like to write about too.

How did you start writing, and which came first, fiction or non-fiction?

I studied journalistic writing in college, and I worked on the college newspaper, and that heavily influenced everything I wrote after that—nearly all of which has been nonfiction, except for occasional humor.

What did you write in all those years before getting a book published?

I’ve been employed as an editor for most of my adult life, so a lot my writing and editing are done at work: newsletters, articles, journals, radio public-service announcements, press releases, catalogs, corporate reports. In 1999 our local newspaper asked for commuters to write freelance columns once a month, and I sent a writing sample and got assigned to write the “Commuter Crossroads” column, alternating with other writers. This was fun and lasted about ten years. Most of the columns are archived on my website. I also started writing some humor columns, sometimes in “Commuter Crossroads” and often in “Commuter Weekly”, which used to be distributed on trains in the Washington, D.C., area. I really hoped to become a syndicated columnist, but it hasn’t happened yet.

One of my sons took a college course in screenwriting, and I asked him for his textbook when he was done with it. I was sure I could write screenplays. I studied that book and the materials on Wordplay, written by two Hollywood screenwriters. Then I wrote two screenplays, both fiction: “Accomplice to Terror” and “Mars and Venus Attack!” I haven’t sold either one yet, but they’re fairly new, written in 2013 and 2014, respectively. Those are on my website too. I would like to sell at least one before pursuing a couple of nonfiction screenplays I have in mind.

So your book “The Editor’s Companion” was a long time in the making. What’s the story behind that?

I was on the faculty of a writers’ conference in St. Louis in 1996, and one of the faculty members said we should write a book together about editing. It sounded good to me, so I came up with an outline, divided the work between us, and wrote my half. I never got anything from the other writer, and I had chosen the topics I knew something about, so I didn’t really know how to finish the book. It lay fallow for years, and then around 2010 I decided to finish it on my own, having acquired a little more knowledge I could apply. I wrote the rest of the book, and I showed it to Dave Fessenden, who loved it and offered to be my agent. He got a contract with Writer’s Digest Books, which asked for something like 65 more pages—in a few weeks! I told Dave that I couldn’t write 65 more pages if they gave me a few years. What I did was come up with a lot more content that didn’t require much writing—bloopers I’d seen in print and online, samples of editing, questions I’d answered—and all this made it a better book, not to mention the editing the publisher did.

I recently blogged about finding that writing non-fiction was still “creative”. Do you agree, or is only fiction writing truly creative?

Nonfiction can be creative. Some years ago I applied to a Master’s program in writing, and I was rejected. It emphasized creative writing, including creative nonfiction. The Creative Nonfiction website describes it as true stories, well told. The writer presents the factual story but captures not only the facts of who, what, when, where, and why, but the atmosphere and the details that illuminate the facts, so that it reads like literature. The writer doesn’t make things up but goes beyond the factual material of journalistic writing. In contrast, just about all my writing, even my screenplays that came straight out of my imagination and are creative in that sense, is journalistic writing, not literature.

Have you got anything else you want to add about creativity and writing (with particular regard to non-fiction)?

I think that creativity can come into play with nonfiction when you write anything that doesn’t follow a formula. Lots of nonfiction writing does follow a formula, and there’s nothing wrong with that. News stories typically use inverted pyramid style, and documents such as directories are more useful if the information in each item is arranged the same way. Often, though, I’ve attended a conference or interviewed someone and then looked through my notes and any materials I collected, and I had to decide what story could be told with the things I gathered and whether anything was missing. Since I mostly write short pieces such as journal articles, I generally don’t need a written outline. Once I decide what the story is, I concentrate on the first sentence, which I usually write in my head. I may spend a good bit of time mulling it over, but I’ve found that once I have the first sentence written, the rest of it comes easily.

Thank you for all those thoughts and your view of creativity in non-fiction! Finally, please tell us where we can find you and your books!

“The Editor’s Companion” is available from the publisher and from Amazon and Amazon UK. My screenplays, book reviews, and articles are on my website, Steve Dunham’s Trains of Thought.

You can read new interviews in the series, either by subscribing to this blog (see the links in the top right if you’re viewing on a PC or on the drop-down menu if you’re reading on a phone or tablet) or clicking on the “non-fiction creativity” tag at the top of this post, which will give you access to all the interviews published so far, as well. Happy reading!

My own books are all firmly in the non-fiction area, but I do involve aspects of my own life and experience to make them more accessible and welcoming. Take a look by exploring the links on this page, or by visiting the books pages.

Fiction, non-fiction and creativity – an interview with author Jeff Deck

hand writingWelcome to a new interview in my series on creativity in non-fiction writing. Today we meet Jeff Deck, who I first came across when I read his excellent memoir / travel book about correcting typos across America, “The Great Typo Hunt” (read my review here).  Jeff’s next project was a fiction book, so he is well placed to talk about creativity in both, and he’s obviously done a lot of thinking about the topic. Read on to see what he has to say …

Hi there, Jeff. First off, tell me a bit about yourself and your books.

Hi, Liz. I’m an indie author who writes science fiction, horror, and fantasy. My new e-book is “Player Choice”, a sci-fi gaming adventure. In a former life, I published a nonfiction book called “The Great Typo Hunt: Two Friends Changing the World, One Correction at a Time”, with Random House.

How did you start writing, and which came first, fiction or non-fiction?

Fiction came first for me—and then nonfiction—and now I’m back to fiction! It’s the circle of life!

I was a creative writing major in college. My thesis was a horror novel that my advisor, an accomplished literary fiction author in his own right, did his best to take seriously (“Nice story, but do you really need a monster?”).

After I graduated, I spent several years improving my writing via various fiction projects, a few in tandem with my writer friend Benjamin D. Herson. We made some attempts to get the traditional publishing industry interested in our work. But it was like trying to breach a fortress. You need either a really good battering ram—or you need to know a guy on the inside. Otherwise you won’t even get past the front gate. In those days, the traditional route was the only real option.

Benjamin and I did get into the fortress eventually, but with a completely different project, and without the intention to do so. We took a road trip around the United States to fix typos on signs, blogged about it, and got a lot of major media coverage. Agents and editors came calling. Thus the nonfiction book “The Great Typo Hunt” was born.

Fiction was still my main squeeze, though. I resurrected a book I’d been working on in the old days. One that just needed a little more love, and, say, five or six more drafts. By the time the novel reached peak level of awesomeness, I realized two things:

1) Because this book was fiction, not nonfiction, I’d be basically starting over if I pursued the traditional publishing industry. My agent was mainly a nonfiction rep. My remaining contacts at Random House were all in nonfiction as well.

2) The publishing world is a lot different than it was in, say, 2005. Advanced technology has created a large audience of e-book consumers. And a writer can reach this audience directly without having to rely on traditional publishers. E-book prices are set lower than physical books, but being able to earn 60-70% of the cover price per sale rather than 12-15% is a big deal.

So I went indie with my fiction. And here we are with the newly released “Player Choice”.

That’s an interesting move, as many people want to go from indie to traditional publisher. But it seems right for you, and that’s what matters! Now, I recently blogged about finding that writing non-fiction was still “creative”. Do you agree, or is only fiction writing truly creative?

I think we have to be careful with this “creative” label. Just like with the “literary” label that we only apply to certain types of books. These criteria are highly subjective.

But to me, creativity manifests itself in nonfiction as well as fiction—and in cooking, and woodworking, and math, and pretty much anywhere else people can use their grey matter to come up with new ideas and innovative solutions to problems.

Maybe it’s different for textbooks, or the manual for a Kenmore vacuum. But while writing “The Great Typo Hunt”, Benjamin and I had to draw on all of our creative powers to make our narrative as entertaining and compelling as we felt the account of our real-world adventures deserved.

We pondered whether first-person singular or plural (or third person!) would be the best way to tell the story. We turned to research, historical events, and the great carnival of the internet to bolster our points in the book or to make chapters more entertaining. We put a lot of thought into what specific turns of phrase, structure, and vocabulary would make our scene descriptions funnier.

If Malcolm Gladwell had been the one to correct typos around the U.S.—doing all the same things we did—his version of the book “The Great Typo Hunt” would still be radically different. He has his own writing style, his own way of thinking, and his own ideas about what to emphasize. If Elizabeth Gilbert, or Bill Bryson, or Mary Roach had taken the trip, we’d see still more examples of drastically different approaches to the same raw material.

Again, with the possible exception of describing how a vacuum cleaner operates, there are a million different ways to approach the same raw material when writing nonfiction. That’s where our individual creativity comes in.

And also, of course, that’s why we should remain skeptical of nonfiction as a source of authority. It’s never the Word of God, even when it pretends to be.

I’ve heard it said that memoir should be considered as “creative non-fiction” – do you agree with that description? How do you think writing memoir differ from writing fiction on the one hand and non-fiction on the other?

If we accept that nonfiction has the capacity to be creative, then memoir is certainly a part of that. It’s an especially good example of creative nonfiction because you are speaking in your voice about your life. You’re not an objective reporter. You’re a storyteller in a tradition that goes back to ancient warriors boasting around the fire about their own exploits.

I think we can still classify other types of nonfiction as creative, while at the same time recognizing the desire for more objectivity in those cases.

An author can inject wonderful personality and color into, say, a book about a certain historical time period (see Ian Mortimer’s “The Time Traveler’s Guide to Elizabethan England” for a great example of this).

But we’d also hope that the author can give us as unbiased and fact-based a look as possible at that period. We’d want the work to be “creative” in the sense of “originality of thought” rather than the other, facetious meaning of the word—”taking liberties with the truth.”

If you use your own life in your fiction, was writing a memoir different from doing that?

“The Great Typo Hunt” was inescapably about my own life. “Player Choice”, on the other hand, takes little pieces from my life in far subtler ways. Most fiction is like that. Even stories set in the most outlandish worlds, starring the most alien characters, will still contain little nuggets of their author’s own outlook and experiences. It’s nearly impossible to take yourself completely out of it.

The focus on virtual-reality gaming in “Player Choice” comes directly from my own interest in video games and future tech, of course. And there are aspects of Glen’s (the main character’s) personality and background that mirror my own (how his single-minded focus on a project endangers his relationships; having an abusive figure in his childhood, etc.).

But my own life also informs the story in less obvious ways. I assign the roles of heroes and villains (and everyone who exists in the grey area between) based on my experiences and my moral outlook.

Another writer—say somebody who grew up on a farm in Caribou, Maine—might have made the technophobes in Player Choice the good guys instead. A writer who’s spent thirty years as an advertising executive might not have painted the ads of the year 2040 in the intrusive, cranium-busting way that I have. Ayn Rand would have made my libertarian firebrand Freya the indisputable heroine of the book.

That’s an interesting perspective, thank you. Finally, please tell us where we can find you and your books!

You can find more about me and my books on my website. “Player Choice” is available wherever e-books are sold. For three bucks. Here are the  links on Amazon and Nook  to get you started.

“The Great Typo Hunt” is available wherever you can buy books, period. Except for that used-book store down on the corner of 19th and Lodgepole, the one that smells like ham sandwiches all the time. Don’t bother looking there.

You can read new interviews in the series, either by subscribing to this blog (see the links in the top right if you’re viewing on a PC or on the drop-down menu if you’re reading on a phone or tablet) or clicking on the “non-fiction creativity” tag at the top of this post, which will give you access to all the interviews published so far, as well. Happy reading!

My own books are all firmly in the non-fiction area, but I do involve aspects of my own life and experience to make them more accessible and welcoming. Take a look by exploring the links on this page, or by visiting the books pages.

Fiction, non-fiction and creativity – an interview with author Jane Badger

hand writingWelcome to a new interview in my series on creativity in non-fiction writing. Today we’re having a chat with Jane Badger. I met Jane because of her blog on pony books, and I own her marvellous history of the pony book, “Heroines on Horseback”, which I reviewed over on my book review blog, but she’s also a fellow-editor and writer of both non-fiction and fiction, so a great person to mine for information and thoughts on my topic. Oh, and didn’t we ALL write some very odd fiction for our English Language ‘O’ Level, if we did one? I certainly recall producing a very miserable piece about a dying carthorse, inspired by a Christmas card from a pile with which we were all issued in the middle of an exam. See – I do write creatively, too (hm).

Hello, Jane, and thank you for joining the discussion! First, please tell us a bit about yourself and your books.

I spend most of my life crawling over what other people write, adding what I fondly hope are tactful comments asking them to explain this ambiguity, and check that inconsistent fact. My one published book so far is “Heroines on Horseback”, which is an examination of the pony story in English literature. I’ve also written a sequel to Ruby Ferguson’s “Jill” books, which I hope will be published next year.

How did you start writing, and which came first, fiction or non-fiction?

As a teenager I wrote very odd fiction for English Language O’ level, but that was about it as far as fiction went. I was far happier writing funny stuff for the school magazine, to the horror of my English teacher, who wrote on my report that I’d get on far better once I’d learned to channel my eccentricity. Once my children arrived, I wrote pieces for the local NCT magazine, and when I became a bookseller, starting writing a website about my speciality, pony books. On the back of that I wrote a general blog with book reviews, and life in my garden: anything, really, as long as it wasn’t too personal. I was asked to write a book on the history of the pony book by specialist publishers Girls Gone By, who have the patience of saints because it took me years to deliver the goods.

At various points when I was writing the book, I do remember thinking that writing fiction must be so much easier because you didn’t have to do a month of solid research before you could even begin a chapter. That didn’t stop me thinking that yes, writing fiction was more creative, because you just made stuff up out of your beautiful imagination, and it all made sense, and you had a plot, and characters, and you said profound things, and made acute observations. About life. Whereas what I did was analyse stuff. And attempt to be vaguely amusing about it. Full stop.

I was then asked to write a time slip pony story, and agreed because I thought if I committed to it then I might do it, and I was interested to see whether I could actually write a work of fiction. So, I started off, not at all sure what was going to happen. What happened was that I got a few chapters in, got bored, and so did what I tend to do when bored, prevaricate. I am a highly experienced prevaricator, and am good at doing something that could justifiably be described as contributing to the thing I’m avoiding doing, whilst still not actually doing it. I’d been contributing to one of those memes where you write a paragraph, and someone else writes a paragraph and so in the end a story emerges. I was contributing to this with gusto, and then wrote a paragraph in which Ruby Ferguson’s Jill appeared, and explained what she’d been up to since the series finished.

Ah ha, I thought. I really want to see what Jill did do after she disappointed generations of readers by tamely agreeing to do a secretarial course rather than go off and work with horses. And whilst it’s not exactly writing my time slip story, it is historical, because it’s set in the 1950s, and I will use it as an exercise to practise writing fiction, because what I will do is write it online, chapter by chapter, and see what people think. And if I write it online, I will get plenty of comment, which is good, because I do like being edited, and if I am tempted to prevaricate and not do it, I will be doing so very publicly and that might be enough to make me stick to it. And I will learn masses of lessons on how to write fiction and I will use them to finish my time slip story.

It sort of worked – Jill is a fantastically popular figure, and so plenty of people were interested in what I was doing, and made whole heaps of useful comments. As I was using characters I knew extremely well, I found it fairly easy to set them going and then write about what they did, which in itself was a very useful lesson. Having people comment as I went along was incredibly useful, and led to me re-jigging the plot and changing a lot of things. And I did finish it.

The time slip story is still languishing, just as I left it. I did write a Nanowrimo novel last year, but hated the process with a passion. I like to write in short chunks which I polish and polish and polish, and having to churn out thousands of words in a day was awful. I did it, but haven’t looked at the ghastly book since, because the emotion I recollect in the relative tranquillity of now is still loathing.

Did you always want to write non-fiction or was this a relatively late development?

There are masses of things I want to write, mostly non-fiction, but the ones I get paid for have a magnetic attraction. But yes, I was glad to provide in “Heroines on Horseback” a resource that I hope will be useful for all fans of the pony book.

I’d like to write a book on the welter of stuff that surrounds the horse world and how it has changed over the last hundred years or so: why the elephant ear Jodhpur? Why the jute rug? Who else lusted over the Jacatex ads for cheap riding clothes?

I’d also like to write more horse history. What I have been asked to write is more fiction, so we’ll see.

I started this whole series off when I blogged about finding that writing non-fiction was still “creative”. Do you agree, or is only fiction writing truly creative?

It is creative, but in a different way. You need to be creative in order to create something readable out of a whole welter of facts.

I’ve heard it said that memoir should be considered as “creative non-fiction” – do you agree with that description? How do you think writing memoir differs from writing fiction on the one hand and non-fiction on the other?

In the sense that you’re putting your own particular gloss on something, then yes, I suppose you are being creative. I do write the odd autobiographical piece, and if they’re going to be any good, I think you actually need to reveal something of yourself. Or be amusing. Or preferably both. Certainly the autobiographical pieces I’ve written that have had the strongest reaction have been the ones where I have said this is how I feel about what’s happened. It’s not something I do often.

If you use your own life in your fiction, was writing a memoir different from doing that?

I’ve never written a memoir, so I don’t know. The secretarial college in my Jill book was based on the one I went to (albeit in the 1980s, but the college was really out of the Ark), and I used bits of my London life.

Have you got anything else you want to add about creativity and writing (with particular regard to non-fiction)?

Go with what you love. I love research, and exploring new things that crop up, and then lassoing the whole lot into something that makes sense, and I hope entertains.

Thank you so much for that! Now, tell us where we can find your books …

My website is at www.janebadgerbooks.co.uk. Heroines on Horseback is available from the usual sources (Waterstones, Amazon, Book Depository), or from me if you want a signed copy. Jill I hope will see the light of day as an actual book sometime in 2015 but nothing’s set in stone yet! Until that point, you can dig her out on my forum here (though this isn’t the final version – just what I wrote online).

You can read new interviews in the series, either by subscribing to this blog (see the links in the top right if you’re viewing on a PC or on the drop-down menu if you’re reading on a phone or tablet) or clicking on the “non-fiction creativity” tag at the top of this post, which will give you access to all the interviews published so far, as well. Happy reading!

My own books are all firmly in the non-fiction area, but I do involve aspects of my own life and experience to make them more accessible and welcoming. Take a look by exploring the links on this page, or by visiting the books pages.

Fiction, non-fiction and creativity – an interview with author Laura Quigley

hand writingWelcome to a new interview in my series on creativity in non-fiction writing. Today I’m excited to introduce you to Laura Quigley, who writes all sorts of things, including non-fiction and fiction, as well as plays, audio and TV scripts. In fact, she started out writing plays, but found that her interest in research led her to move into the non-fiction book arena. Laura’s got some very interesting points to make about research and non-fiction – have a look at last week’s interview with Linda Gillard for more on the research process. I love the subtle differences and similarities we’re building up as this interview series continues! 

Hello, Laura. Tell me a bit about yourself and your books.

I’m Laura Quigley and you name it, I write it: TV, audio, books, plays, short stories. I’m based in Plymouth UK, bringing up two brilliant kids and trying to keep my partner sane while he works ridiculous hours. I’ve got four books out – 3 non-fiction, the 4th is a time-travelling adventure for kids of all ages.

How did you start writing, and which came first, fiction or non-fiction?

Fiction came first, but not in books. I studied screenwriting and I was doing well with stage plays but the Arts Council cut the budget which prevented my award-winning play from touring. At the same time, theatre hours and family hours weren’t mixing well, so I thought, “write it as a book”. The play was based on a true story from the English Civil War,  so I approached the History Press and got the research published, and that quickly followed with a commission to write “Bloody British History: Plymouth” for them. Then I wrote “South West Secret Agents” for them, which got me into Plymouth’s International Book Festival, appearing alongside more famous, literary writers!

In the meantime, a new publisher was looking for someone to write a new series of time-travelling fiction for them (www.forelock-books.co.uk) and that turned out so well, they want at least three more from me! And I work regularly now in both fiction and non-fiction – to me, it’s all story-telling, but some of the stories are all the more remarkable for being true.

Did you always want to write non-fiction or was this a relatively late development?

I’ve been writing since I was nine and I won a poetry contest. I’ve always written and I keep practically every word – it’s amazing how often I go back to an idea from when I was a teenager. I studied drama, media, film and television at University and did very well academically, probably achieving more than I did creatively in the setting. I wanted to go into film production but ended up in educational publishing/management (long story!) until I had kids. Then suddenly I couldn’t work full-time and writing was a job I could fit around the family. So I’ve always written. Yet it seems I’m only just now finding my ‘voice’.

I recently blogged about finding that writing non-fiction was still “creative”. Do you agree, or is only fiction writing truly creative?

Anything involving the craft of language is creative. However, what you are asking is a very complicated issue because there’s more to communication and crafting language than being creative, and yet creativity is key. I write narrative non-fiction, so there’s a lot of research involved and an academic mind-set helps with ordering and structuring the information. But I’m also telling a story and that requires shaping the language, modifying the flow of words, bringing the past to life, getting into the heads of the people I’m describing. There’s a lot of that in fiction too, obviously, and also a surprising amount of research in fiction! Sometimes the only difference I can see between the two is that for fiction I don’t have to have footnotes and a bibliography. Some might see fiction as less factual and more emotive, but the best non-fiction is also emotive, whether that’s nostalgia or self-help, history or travel guides. (Michael Wood’s “In the Footsteps of Alexander the Great” is non-fiction, but read that delicious prose – a fine example of emotive non-fiction.)

In short, I use the same skill sets for both, on a sliding scale between creativity and logical analysis.

I’ve heard it said that memoir should be considered as “creative non-fiction” – do you agree with that description? How do you think writing memoir differ from writing fiction on the one hand and non-fiction on the other?

If it’s based on fact, including memory, then it’s non-fiction and all non-fiction has an element of creativity, so I don’t see the need to distinguish memoir. Museums are full of memoir! In a way, all history is memoir, just some of it is in first person.

If you use your own life in your fiction, was writing a memoir different from doing that?

I use all my own senses in my fiction, but memoir is recording how it actually was, while fiction is inspired by the emotional realities while not necessarily recording the facts. Life inspires. Memoir records. Imagination helps in our understanding in both non-fiction and fiction, but non-fiction tries to stick to the facts. Fiction can be about creating new realities, inventing new scenarios. Memoir is exploring reality as it was. Difficult distinction, but there is a definite distinction between the two.

Have you got anything else you want to add about creativity and writing (with particular regard to non-fiction)?

As part of my research, I read a lot of non-fiction writers who could benefit from a course in creative writing, not because I want them to learn to make stuff up – far from it! But there are ways of telling a story in an interesting, compelling way and there are ways of putting facts in a series on a page that will bore the pants off the readers.

Great non-fiction writers (and teachers) communicate the facts using creative language and story-telling techniques. I’m not just talking about popular history presenters here either. I’m talking lecturers in business studies, chemistry professors, self-help gurus, renowned political commentators, journalists…the list goes on. Human beings communicate in stories that utilise language and all great stories communicate truths about the human condition and the world we live in. Non-fiction and fiction writers all have to learn to use these tools we’ve been given most effectively to get the message across.

Thank you so much for those thoughts, Laura! Tell us where we can find your books!

My website is currently: www.lauraquigleywriteyourstory.weebly.com

My fiction is at: www.forelockbooks.co.uk

My audio fiction is at: http://wordofmouthproductions1.wordpress.com/2014/09/18/ghost-stories-uk/

My non-fiction is easiest to find on Amazon.

And if you’d like to read my most popular blog post to date, which is about writing non-fiction, it’s here.

You can read new interviews in the series, either by subscribing to this blog (see the links in the top right if you’re viewing on a PC or on the drop-down menu if you’re reading on a phone or tablet) or clicking on the “non-fiction creativity” tag at the top of this post, which will give you access to all the interviews published so far, as well. Happy reading!

My own books are all firmly in the non-fiction area, but I do involve aspects of my own life and experience to make them more accessible and welcoming. Take a look by exploring the links on this page, or by visiting the books pages.

Fiction, non-fiction and creativity – an interview with author Linda Gillard

hand writingIt’s time to pick up the reins of my series of interviews on this blog on creativity in non-fiction writing , and I’m thrilled to introduce my friend and successful indie publisher, Linda Gillard, as we relaunch the series for 2015. I met Linda through my hobby of BookCrossing, well, let’s say several years ago, when her first books, “A Lifetime Burning” and “Emotional Geology” were published by a small press specialising in fiction about the (slightly older) woman. Linda branched out on her own and has now published seven genre-busting, page-turning books about people in interesting situations (from a woman marooned with an ex-soldier in a crumbling castle to someone looking over her own life as she dies, to Gothic romantic suspense goings-on in the Scottish Highlands). Linda started off writing journalism, however, so she has a great view on both sides of the writing fence, and I’m honoured to have interviewed her on her thoughts about creativity in non-fiction and fiction … 

Hello, Linda! We’re old friends, but please humour me for the blog and tell me a bit about yourself and your books

Hello, Liz! I live on the Black Isle in the Scottish Highlands and have been an actress, journalist and teacher. I’m the author of seven novels, including STAR GAZING, short-listed in 2009 for Romantic Novel of the Year and the Robin Jenkins Literary Award (for writing that promotes the Scottish landscape.) My fourth novel, HOUSE OF SILENCE became a Kindle bestseller and was selected by Amazon as one of their Top Ten “Best of 2011” in the Indie Author category. My latest novel, CAULDSTANE, ventures further into the Gothic, and I describe it as a cross between a supernatural thriller and a modern fairy tale.

How did you start writing, and which came first, fiction or non-fiction

I’ve always written something. As a child, I made my own comics and wrote a sci-fi novella when I was a teenager. As an adult I became a writer of long newsy letters. The first time I was paid for producing words was as a freelance journalist. I’d trained and worked as an actress, but I found I had time on my hands, underemployed at the National Theatre and I submitted a few things to magazines which led to a regular column in IDEAL HOME magazine. I also wrote for garden and parenting magazines – mostly lifestyle pieces with a humorous angle. I didn’t start writing fiction until many years later, after I’d given up teaching.

Did you always want to write non-fiction as well as fiction?

I never wanted to do anything other than make up stories. Drifting into lightweight journalism was, I think, an extension of letter-writing and journal-keeping, but I didn’t particularly enjoy it. I found it very hard writing to a word limit and a deadline. I hated the way sub-editors would trim my copy from the bottom of the paragraph up, cutting my punch lines. (I learned to submit fewer words, so they had no need to cut.)

I thought of it as well-paid literary drudgery. I learned a great deal, but I was heartily relieved when I stopped. It was such a relief when I started writing fiction and realised – oh joy! – a chapter could be as long as I wanted it to be.

It sounds like you found your home with fiction, but I know you’ve got some interesting things to say about non-fiction, too. So, I recently blogged about finding that writing non-fiction was still “creative”. Do you agree, or is only fiction writing truly creative?

Yes, I agree. You have to be very creative to present a complex subject to someone who knows little or nothing about it. It’s a challenging exercise in empathy. If you’re trying to convey how gardening can become a passion, even an obsession, you have to imagine what the reader would find interesting about the subject. You are looking for an entertaining angle, particularly with magazine journalism, and your painstaking research mustn’t show. Your object is to make someone read to the end of the article instead of turning the page in search of something more interesting.

When writing non-fiction, you have to hook the reader and keep their attention. These were skills I developed as a journalist and they came in very useful years later when I started writing novels.

I’ve heard it said that memoir should be considered as “creative non-fiction” – do you agree with that description?

There’s a rather glib saying: “All fiction is biography and all biography is fiction”. I think the boundaries are often blurred. I loved Dirk Bogarde’s volumes of autobiography but they entailed (he admitted later) significant lies of omission because he failed to mention his mother’s alcoholism, which he revealed only after she was dead.

I researched ghost writing for my most recent novel, CAULDSTANE and it appears ghost writers of “autobiographies” are aware that some of the stories their subjects tell aren’t actually true, so I suppose you could argue they’re actually ghosting fiction!

Emily Dickinson wrote, “Tell all the truth, but tell it slant”. As soon as you begin to write a memoir you are editing memories. (But memory edits memories!) At best you’re telling the truth-as-you-saw-it, which is probably going to be “slant”.

How do you think writing memoir differs from writing fiction on the one hand and non-fiction on the other?

Fiction and non-fiction (i.e. factual books) have to be believable. Memoir doesn’t, because it’s already “true” – a delightful paradox and one that has led me to describe writing good fiction as “telling true lies”.

I think it’s helpful to look at the different audiences one could be writing for … A reader picking up one of Daphne du Maurier’s novels is looking for a good read, with a beginning, middle and an end. The reader of a guide book to Cornwall wants impressions and verified facts about Cornwall. The reader of a biography of du Maurier wants to know all about Daphne and will probably tolerate a little intelligent speculation.

The biography needs to be interesting and well-written, but it doesn’t actually have to be believable (because we all know truth is stranger than fiction). Nor does a biography have to have a climax two-thirds of the way through, followed by a satisfying resolution tying up all the ends. The subject of a memoir can dwindle into unproductive, boring old age and the reader will forgive. They won’t forgive that in a novel.

What about research? Do authors of fiction and authors of memoir/non-fiction differ in the way they research?

I think they differ in the way they use it.

I assume authors of non-fiction and memoir must love doing research, but I don’t. I much prefer making stuff up. And that’s how I work – I make stuff up, then research it later to see what I got wrong. I prefer to do it this way because it avoids the stodgy info-dump, perpetrated by authors who have spent many hours in the British Library and want their readers to know.

I include only the information necessary to tell the story – and that’s the essential difference, I think. The novelist aims to tell a story, but the author of memoir and non-fiction is more likely to be painting a picture, one that’s big and detailed, possibly comprehensive. The detail is the point. In a novel, the detail is never the point. The story is the point and research must always serve that story.

It can be hard when you come across a really juicy fact to leave it out! But interesting is not the same as useful. The author of fiction must ignore the temptation to include it, but the author of non-fiction can succumb because fascinating facts will add to the overall picture.

Pace is an issue for the author of non-fiction, but it’s less of an issue. Readers don’t expect non-fiction to be un-put-downable (though of course the best is! Margaret Forster’s biography of du Maurier is an example. But there you have a marriage made in Heaven: a biography written by a first-rate novelist.)

If you use your own life in your fiction, was writing a memoir different from doing that?

I haven’t used much of my own life in my fiction, apart from my acting career and my experience of mental ill health. I’ve only written “memoir” in the form of many guest blogs about mental illness, cancer, disability and writing.

The main difference I’ve noticed is, when I write about that sort of thing in my fiction, I’m trying hard to generate sympathy for the afflicted character. It’s an exercise in evoking compassion and understanding. But when I write about my own life in blogs, I’m not doing that. On the contrary, I’m trying hard not to be sentimental or self-pitying. I stick to the facts because I want to inform the reader and make them think rather than feel. It’s a more dispassionate, journalistic approach to the material.

What an interesting discussion – thank you so much for taking part in my interview series! Linda’s written such a variety of pieces of work, and still obviously continues to write on writing and her own experiences, as well as working on the fiction side of things.

You can find Linda’s books at …

Amazon UK, Amazon US, Kobo, Nook and iBooks.

Her website is at www.lindagillard.co.uk and you can also get in touch, talk about her books and read news and reviews on Facebook.

You can read new interviews in the series, either by subscribing to this blog (see the links in the top right if you’re viewing on a PC or on the drop-down menu if you’re reading on a phone or tablet) or clicking on the “non-fiction creativity” tag at the top of this post, which will give you access to all the interviews published so far, as well. Happy reading!

My own books are all firmly in the non-fiction area, but I do involve aspects of my own life and experience to make them more accessible and welcoming. Take a look by exploring the links on this page, or by visiting the books pages.

 

Fiction, non-fiction and creativity – an interview with Sandy Appleyard

hand writingI’ve been talking about creativity in non-fiction writing recently and here we have the next in my interview series on the subject. Today we’re chatting with Sandy Appleyard, a Canadian writer who has made the move from non-fiction to fiction and has some interesting things to say about the processes involved in both.

Hello, Sandy, and thanks for joining in the discussion. Tell me a bit about yourself first, please …

I’m a Canadian multi-genre author and I’ve written both fiction and non-fiction. My writing began with non-fiction and then I moved to fiction. Recently I self-published another non-fiction but then right after another fiction…I seem to be flip-flopping! Writing non-fiction for me was inspired by the need to share personal life stories. Afterward, since I’ve read so many fiction titles I wanted to take a stab at it myself.

How did you start writing, and which came first, fiction or non-fiction?

Writing started out for me as a way to memorialize my father, who died of alcoholism back in 1992.  Then, after several years of battling a back deformity, I decided to write an inspirational memoir about Scoliosis.  Finally, I ran out of personal material, and after voraciously reading fiction all my life, it occurred to me to give writing romantic suspense a try.  I’ve been hooked ever since.

I recently blogged about finding that writing non-fiction was still “creative”. Do you agree, or is only fiction writing truly creative?

Writing fiction and non-fiction, for me, is very different. With non-fiction, while it is still creative writing, the creativity is more in eloquently stating your feelings/beliefs so your readers understand the situation that you were in. This exercise was certainly helpful when switching to fiction because it enabled me to write in that same fashion so readers could understand how the characters felt.

I’ve heard it said that memoir should be considered as “creative non-fiction” – do you agree with that description? How do you think writing memoir differ from writing fiction on the one hand and non-fiction on the other?

With fiction as opposed to non-fiction, you need to add other things like suspense, love scenes, etc., and a big factor-it’s all made up! Writers, myself included, often use our life experiences when writing fiction so we know what situations are like first hand. If we don’t have the experience in our back pocket to reference, that’s what research is for!

You can find Sandy’s work on her website or on her author page on Amazon.

Watch out for more interviews, either by subscribing to this blog (see the links in the top right if you’re viewing on a PC or on the drop-down menu if you’re reading on a phone or tablet) or clicking on the “non-fiction creativity” tag.

 

Fiction, non-fiction and creativity – an interview with Kathleen Dixon Donnelly

hand writingAs part of my discussion of creativity in non-fiction writing I’ve been putting together an interview series with a range of writers on a range of topics. Today it’s time to say hello to Kathleen Dixon Donnelly, an academic researcher, writer on writers and copyeditor, who has plenty to say about non-fiction writing and creativity. I find Kathleen’s comment on people’s assumption that if you’re a writer, you’re a fiction writer, very interesting: I think there’s a lot more going on for fiction writers, a lot more synergy, and a lot more willingness to invite them to do readings and discussion sessions. But as Kathleen says and I’ve come to realise, writing non-fiction is creative, too, and it certainly doesn’t mean that you put out boring books!

Hello, Kathleen, and welcome to the interview series. First of all, tell me a bit about yourself and your books (a paragraph will do).

My academic research for my Ph.D. in communications was about ‘writers who hung out together.’ This included four salons in the early 20th century: W B Yeats and the Irish Literary Renaissance, Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury Group, Gertrude Stein and the Americans in Paris, and Dorothy Parker and the Algonquin Round Table. Now I write and give presentations about them—their lives, their loves, their times, more than about their works—without most of the academic part.

Having just started to wind down my full-time teaching career, I am working at home on projects, including copyediting and proofreading for others. Oops. Two paragraphs.

How did you start writing, and which came first, fiction or non-fiction?

I’ve always been a non-fiction writer. I like reading fiction, but for writing, I never felt I could make stuff up that had any credibility. The older I get, the more I realize how bizarre real life is, so who needs fiction?!

Did you always want to write non-fiction?

I have wanted to ‘be a writer’ since my mother taught me to sign my Christmas cards when I was three. God bless her.

I recently blogged about finding that writing non-fiction was still “creative”. Do you agree, or is only fiction writing truly creative?

Ha! Don’t get me started. My best teacher at university told us in our Writing Non-Fiction module that it was every bit as creative. The godfather of the Creative Non-fiction Foundation [CNF], Lee Gutkind [whom I used to hang out with in a group at Sodini’s restaurant in Pittsburgh in the 1970s], was quite insulted when I called him once to ask for recommendations for a guest speaker about creativity, and said I wanted a fiction writer. He misunderstood why, for that particular slot, I wanted a novelist, and I didn’t have time to explain to him that I personally have always felt non-fiction is equally creative. He’s never published any of my stuff—not sure if these two incidents are related…

I’ve heard it said that memoir should be considered as “creative non-fiction” – do you agree with that description? How do you think writing memoir differs from writing fiction on the one hand and non-fiction on the other?

‘Creative non-fiction’ is a better term than ‘life writing,’ and the CNF has campaigned to use this term consistently. Their motto is ‘You can’t make this stuff up.’ I’ve got the mug. And the t-shirt.

I would include memoir, but also a whole lot of genres:  biography, science writing, even technical writing is creative if well done. A broad definition of creativity is that it means bringing together two things that weren’t together before.

If you use your own life in your fiction, is writing memoir different from doing that?

I don’t do fiction. But, in addition to ‘my writers,’ I have done a lot of blogging about my travels under the name Gypsy Teacher.

Have you got anything else you want to add about creativity and writing (with particular regard to non-fiction)?

I have been very disappointed in the reactions of people here in the UK, particularly other writers, when I say I write non-fiction. They instantly think of technical writing or reporting or something boring. It appears that the default position is that, if you are a writer, you’re writing a novel.

At one workshop, I made a comment, and the tutor said, ‘So life sometimes follows fiction…’ No. Fiction follows life. That’s where we get our stories and ideas from. I just prefer to write my interpretation of how they actually happened, rather than use them as a starting point for invented stories. I really admire those who can do that, but it just ain’t my style…

Thank you, Kathleen. Finally, tell us where we can find your books!

They are all self-published, which, for me, is a disappointment. Self-publishing is a good way to go, but I still hope to have the recognition of a legitimate publisher wanting to take me on.

My blog about the writers, ‘Such Friends,’ is updated monthly and also includes other pieces. I also tweet about them @SuchFriends. I have self-published a copy of my master’s thesis, Manager as Muse: A Case Study of Maxwell Perkins’ Work with F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway and Thomas Wolfe at Lulu.com . Because a major motion picture about Perkins, starring Colin Firth and Jude Law as Wolfe, is currently in production, I have published a less academic version on CreateSpace in both print and Kindle formats (the official launch date isn’t until February, but you’re all welcome to take a look at it now).

My Gypsy Teacher blog is no longer posted [thanks a lot, Blogger], but I have collected the posts into ‘blooks’ at Lulu and I tweet @gypsyteacher1. The most recent blog post, from May 2013, is still available.

Reviving my freelance business, K. Donnelly Communications, I have started a new blog, where I have been blogging about writing and editing.

Watch out for more interviews, either by subscribing to this blog (see the links in the top right if you’re viewing on a PC or on the drop-down menu if you’re reading on a phone or tablet) or clicking on the “non-fiction creativity” tag.