Nonfiction writers imagine. Fiction writers invent. These are fundamentally different acts, performed to different ends.
Unlike a fiction reader whose only task is to imagine, a nonfiction reader is asked to behave more deeply: to imagine, and also to believe. Fiction doesn't require its readers to believe; in fact, it offers its readers the great freedom of experience without belief - something real life can't do. Fiction gives us a rhetorical question: "What if this happened?" (The best) nonfiction gives us a statement, something more complex: "This may have happened."
Sunday, April 11, 2010
Saturday, April 3, 2010
Free Lunch
For years now, I've been a fan of Cheeseburger Brown stories. Like many others, I jumped right from the Vader Blog into the surreal Simon of Space and have been hooked on his stories ever since. If you're a fan of Sci-fi and have a few spare moments to kill online, I'd recommend jaunting on over to his Free Stories section. Dive right in - start anywhere, it doesn't matter. Many of the stories are loosely connected to one another, so once you've started you'll find yourself pulled into other narratives as well. It's a wonderful motley mess of Sci-fi goodliness.
And although I don't read his blog as often as I should, I loved this short tale about his Time Traveling Son.
And although I don't read his blog as often as I should, I loved this short tale about his Time Traveling Son.
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