Writers Tricks of the Trade January-February 2015 | Page 36

PRESS “CONTROL” THEN CLICK BUY TO PURCHASE THE BOOK MORE CREATIVE NON-FICTION BOOKS WHAT IN THE WORLD IS “CREATIVE NON-FICTION?” (CONT’D) Most people have stories about what happened at the office, how we met our spouse, a hilarious misunderstanding and on and on ad infinitum. When telling these stories, we often embellish the facts for the shock or humor value by adding details that didn’t actually happen and exaggerating or eliminating some that did. What does a story like that become? Creative non-fiction. Facts mixed with fictional details. MANIPULATING THE STORY WHILE BEING "SORT OF" TRUE TO FACTS Think about it. Often the tendency is to leave out details that might make us look bad, stupid or gullible. When we are talking about someone we don’t like, they might be depicted as a real ogre when in fact they are only someone with bad habits. But it is more entertaining to give them extras that make them loathsome. Let’s not call these lies. They are they dance around a clear and truthful account of a situation. Adding controversy or being deliberately ambiguous or misleading, doesn’t qualify as a bald-faced out-and-out lie. At least that’s my story and I’m sticking to it. BUY WHAT MAKES THE STORY CHANGE? Depending upon the point-of-view we choose, the story changes. Are we telling only what we can see (first person)? What someone else has seen and is now telling the reader (third person)? Perhaps a God-like knows all/sees all point-of-view that includes knowing thoughts of various people (omniscent). Or, a combination of any of the above. We determine who is important to the story, who will be most likeable, what events will trigger the reader’s emotion, etc. This might not be the way it really happened, but it makes for a better read. We are being creative with factual information plus some manipulation and prevarication thrown in for good measure. In the end, however, if you want it to stay creative non-fiction, you are stuck with what really happened. Otherwise it becomes a creation of your imagination or pure fiction. Ripoff, written with co-author Caroline Rowe, is a government embezzlement story that happens in the Federal prison system, a division of the Department of Justice. The story is fiction but the inspiration was from first-hand knowledge of furniture manufacturing in the Federal prison system. In other words, the scam didn’t actually happen, but from our experience we knew it would be possible. As for the humor, well, that’s a bonus. Whichever path you choose, it’s yo