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I had an enjoyable Friday night and Saturday at the B.C. Association of Magazine Publishers annual conference near Sidney, B.C. It's always fun to talk about the art and business of my favourite medium with other magaholics and periodical print junkies.
The keynote address was an inspiring talk by Bryan Welch, publisher of Mother Earth News and the UTNE Reader, who gave a few tips on trying to balance a sense of mission with a successful business model -- to make a living at writing, editing and publishing what you love.
One of the great things about magazine conferences is the reminder of all the publications, new and old, that are out there that even someone with an acute publication detector often misses. A few of my faves who were up at Dunsmuir Lodge this weekend:- Color Magazine: a super-hip skateboard culture magazine out of Vancouver that has to be one of the most inventively conceived and designed publications in Canada.
- subTERRAIN Magazine: I probably offended the editors of a few literary quarterlies when I mentioned at the conference that I thought subTERRAIN (another Vancouver publication) was one of the only literary offerings in Canada to have an original focus (a sort of gritty urban surrealism) and a clear sense of its niche readership. Too many other lit-mags tend to have such a broad CanLit focus that they try to be everything to everyone and never distinguish themselves from each other (perhaps because most are published from the safety of a university).
- Momentum: The magazine for self-propelled people: a fabulous little Van-City publication, distributed around North America, that promotes the virtues and possibilities of pedal power.
- Unlimited: a new magazine out of Edmonton, aimed at young business types and other "social entrepreneurs" -- i.e., not another old boyz biz mag.
- YES and KNOW magazines: science publications for young minds, based here in Victoria. I can't wait till my own ankle-biters are old enough to read these great mags.
Now, I only wish I had more time to indulge my magaholism.... Feel free to let me know of any other great new mags to gorge upon.
Maybe I’m just an over-sensitive “ink-stained wretch” whose writing usually appears in such ephemeral fish wrap as magazines and newspapers. Or maybe my paranoia has been inflamed now that my own first book of non-fiction will be launched, in less than three months, like a clay pigeon into the gunsights of reviewers. Whatever the case, I’ve noticed every other week or so yet another literary commentator—usually a novelist I’ve never heard of before (there are so many!), most often in the Globe and Mail—making the case for the artistic superiority of fiction over non-fiction.
The latest drive-by shooting comes courtesy of a review of People of the Book, Geraldine Brooks’ latest novel, which tells a fictional history of a historical object, the Sarajevo Haggadah (a bit, I imagine, like Annie Proulx’s Accordion Crimes or the film The Red Violin). In last weekend’s Globe books section, the reviewer opined in her opening paragraph:
The craze for memoirs and reality shows suggests a contemporary addiction to what really happened—the private made public before our very eyes—and, perhaps, a failure of the imagination. Wrestling with truth in all of its contradictions and complexities demands active imagining, even the creation and transformation of a world: the province of a novelist. Novel, after all, means new.
Let’s leave aside the various logical fallacies in the paragraph’s central syllogism: Truth = new. Novel = “new”. Ergo, novel = truth.
And let’s try to ignore the loaded language with which the author stacks the emotional odds in favour of her preferred genre. Non-fiction = craze, addiction, failure. Fiction = complexities, active imagining, creation and transformation.
And don’t even tempt me to point out that yoking literary memoirs with reality-TV is a stroke as broad as suggesting Alice Munro shares the same creative stage as the writers of, say, Two and a Half Men.
Instead, ask yourselves: why are so many novelists hyperventilating of late about the failings of non-fiction? Of course, they can’t make the case on purely aesthetic grounds, given the range of literary talent among memoirists, biographers, travel writers and other creative non-fiction authors—and the fact that so many of their colleagues seem to be genre-swapping switch-hitters these days. Nor can they appeal to the tastes of readers, who—as any agent, publisher, or bookstore owner will tell you—are increasingly gravitating toward the “literature of fact”.
Instead, critics of non-fiction retreat to that last bastion of fundamentalist illogic—the appeal to “Truth”. And they don’t mean the messy realm of small-T “truths”—what journalists otherwise know as “getting your facts right.” No, they mean big-T subjective Truth, emotional Truth, psychological Truth…which all sounds suspiciously like what Stephen Colbert famously dubbed “truthiness”.
Of course, what fiction really provides is not truth but verisimilitude—the feel of truth. The power of a novelist is the sleight of hand to convince you that characters and situations with little reality beyond black ink on dead trees are alive enough in your mind to care about for the next 300 pages. That's no mean feat.
To insist, however, that fiction by its essential nature provides the clearest window into a person’s soul or into a moral situation is bunkum. Few novels in the past few years have offered up anti-heroes as complex, as contradictory and as tragically fascinating as logger-turned-eco-crusader Grant Hadwin in John Vaillant’s masterful The Golden Spruce or the anguished teenage murder-accomplice Warren Glowatski in Rebecca Godfrey’s meticulously researched Under the Bridge. And knowing that both these individuals once walked among us only deepens the effect of reading these books.
That’s why I get annoyed when reviewers of creative non-fiction seem to wish they were reading a novel instead. Take, for instance, the otherwise positive notice (again in Globe Books, again by a novelist) for Heather Robertson’s recent biography of Joseph Tyrrell, Measuring Mother Earth, which concludes:
Heather Robertson has done a commendable amount of research and produced a significant contribution to our knowledge of an important Canadian figure. It has also resulted in a quotation-heavy book that might discourage the casual reader. Robertson attempts to overcome this difficulty by enlivening the narrative with occasional short imaginings. Unfortunately, these jar with their sudden leaps into the present tense, yet they might point a way through the tangled web that this self-interested man wove around himself. Perhaps one day, Joe Tyrrell will live again -- in a novel.
Sigh.
In the end, I think there’s a bit of special pleading at work here. The novel had a pretty good run as the top gun of western literary culture – give it a 100 years, from 1850 to 1950, what Ursula K. Le Guin has called "the century of the book”. But fiction writers have (reluctantly) had to learn to share the love with screenwriters and movie-makers, as cinema has come to overshadow fiction in the popular consciousness. Even television, that longtime whipping boy of literary taste-makers, can boast collective creations (such as Six Feet Under and The Wire) as narratively complex, as richly characterized and as thematically dense as any novel.
Now it seems that fiction writers have drawn a line in the sand and are reluctant to grant the same pride of place to a genre so similar to their own (like a novel, but without the made-up bits). And it’s not just fiction writers. As Le Guin noted in her recent Harper’s essay, the latest NEA report that lamented the decline of book reading in America didn’t actually count non-fiction as “literature”.
Isn’t it time to see past this prejudice? To judge a book not by the genre advertised on its cover (eg, “A Novel” or “A True Story”) but by the depth of its content and the quality of its prose? To understand that “truth” can arrive in many different forms?
I certainly hope so… at least before my own book is thrown to the literary lions.