Fact, fiction and ditching the sister: Ali Bacon ponders being classified as non-fiction
Not long ago I wrote here about opting for fiction rather than
non-fiction in my latest book, but recent events have made me wonder if I achieved what I
set out to do, since I’m delighted that In
the Blink of an Eye is listed for the People’s Book Prize but a bit disconcerted
to find it in the non-fiction category!
I daresay the competition may have its own reasons or its own
criteria and I guess it’s too late to ask for a ‘reassignment’. Nor is the book
so far from the facts for the classification to worry me unduly, although it
does feel odd to be alongside (and up against?) books like Understanding BRCA or Rock and
Pop on British TV which I am sure are entirely laudable in their respective
ways. A trip to an indie bookshop on Saturday which had lots of
genre fiction also made me wonder again about where my book lies in the scheme
of things. I couldn’t help feeling it looked more at home in the biography section
than next to Robert Harris, Karen Maitland and Simon Scarrow. And these days
there are so many gradations between fact and fiction. Remember how His Bloody Project gave itself a (spurious?)
authenticity in purporting to be a recorded report?
Even Sugar Money by Jane Harris, recently shortlisted for the Sir Walter Scott Prize does something
similar at the end, explaining how the hero’s journey came to be written down
and I see one reviewer says it is based on a true story. I’ll have to reread
the author’s notes! But this strikes me as a Victorian preoccupation, needing to
feel things are real, or give an account of how the story as passed down which
I actually feel is unnecessary – it’s just a story after all!
Going back to Blink,
although the form and structure are different, I think it’s closest in
intention to fictional biographies like Loving
Frank, by Nancy Horan and my most recent read, Love and Ruin by Paula McLain, about Martha Gellhorn, Hemingway's second wife. When successfully done (and not all of the ones I've read actually work) these books fashion the story of a well-known figure
into the novel form. I read these books and accept them for what they are, a
filling out of the facts as they are known, and especially the attempt to get
inside the thoughts and motivations of those concerned. They answer the
question not so much of what happened, but how did it happen and what did it
feel like to be there? With Hemingway, with Frank Lloyd Wright, with my heroes Hill and Adamson?
If you’re wondering about the sister, by the way, when I
began to write Blink in its final
form I stepped away from the research and wrote from my memory of it, my own
ideas of how it had been. As a result I left out a few people who weren’t
required by the story and didn’t ever add them back in. So Jessie Mann is know to have had two sisters, not one, and the May Mann of my
story is a total fabrication. Similarly Amelia Paton had a younger brother Hugh
Waller Paton, a respected artist though less celebrated than Joseph Noel Paton
who appears in my version as Noel. I’m afraid Hugh Waller simply doesn’t figure, though
who knows his influence on his sister?
So there we have it, some of our facts are fiction, others
are just plain missing. I don’t imagine the organisers of the People’s Prize
are too concerned. And at this stage, you can vote for there books in each
category – so Rock & Pop on TV, BRCA and
me!
Vote, vote, vote! (and only 0.99 to buy this month) |
The e-book of In the Blink of an Eye is on offer at 0.99 until the end of June from Linen Press or you can read an extract here.
I would of course love you to vote for it in the People's Book Prize along with any others you fancy.
Comments
Lots of luck - I hope you win!