UCLA Extension Writer's Program

A Conversation with Lisa Cron

Everything I know about Story I learned from Lisa Cron. Well, not entirely, but sometimes it feels that way! Lisa is the author of two groundbreaking books, Wired for Story and Story Genius, which are devoted to her passion to educate us about what Story is, and also, how to harness its power—both on the page and in life. It turns out that most of her teachings are based in brain science.

Her latest book, Story or Die, extends her knowledge beyond the world of writing and applies it to the public and political sphere. She shows us how we can strategically use our deep understanding of story to persuade and change minds, around the issues that matter most to us.

Scroll down to read our full interview below!


Lisa Cron is a story coach, speaker, and the author of Wired for Story and Story Genius. She has previously worked as a literary agent, a television producer, and a story consultant for Warner Brothers and The William Morris Agency, among others, and currently advises writers, nonprofits, educators, and journalists on the art and craft of story. Cron has also served on the faculty of the School of Visual Arts MFA program in visual narrative, and since 2006 has taught in the UCLA Extension Writers’ Program.

In her new book, Story or Die, Lisa decodes the power of story, first by examining how the brain processes information, translates it into narrative, and then guards it as if your life depends on it. Armed with that insight, she focuses on how to find your real target audience and then pinpoint their hidden resistance. Finally, she takes you, step-by-step, through her method for creating your own story, one that allows your audience to overcome their resistance and take up your call to action, not because you told them to, but because they want to.

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KARIN GUTMAN: How did this book emerge after your first two books? It feels like you're entering new territory. Did it come from your political frustrations?

LISA CRON: Yes, it did come from the political. I had written a proposal for this book at the exact same time I wrote the proposal for Story Genius, which was 2014, and my publisher wanted both of them. And I thought, “You know, let's just do Story Genius and then we'll see.” And then I decided, I really don't want to do Story or Die, because I was looking at the world of advertising and the last thing I would ever want to do is help advertisers, because it's like now we're going to help you go sell something that people don't want. I mean, the whole world of advertising has always turned my stomach.

It's funny, in the TED Talk conference I did, the last person talking was Jonathan Gottschall who wrote The Storytelling Animal. He's one of the nicest people on the planet, and I asked him at that time, “Have you done any consulting with businesses?” And he said, “Oh my god, yes. I did it once. And I will never do it again.” He said, “I did it for Pepsi and I realized, the last thing I wanted was to help them sell,” and these were his words, “diabetes juice.”

He's just like, “I don't want to be part of that.” That so stuck with me. Politicians and advertisers and televangelists, they understand story way better than writers and way better than the rest of us. Stories are affecting us every minute of every day whether we know it or not. And we don't. We tend to think of story as soft science or not science at all, and it's just wrong. That's the myth. The truth is story is literally how we make sense of absolutely, positively everything.

KARIN: So obviously you changed your mind and decided to publish?

LISA: It felt like, it’s important to get the information out there in whatever small way that I could by writing this book. Because my other goal—besides bringing the world back from alternative facts and demagogues like Donald Trump and QAnon—was to reframe how we see emotion. Because again, we get it completely wrong—150% wrong—in terms of what we think emotion is, and what we've been taught emotion is. We're all afraid of emotion. Even our fear of emotion is gendered, in that men are terrified of emotion and women are terrified of what the patriarchy will do to them if they express emotion. We tend to think of emotion as that big, nebulous, ephemeral cloud that’s going to try to get in our way and make us do something wrong. That is not what emotion is. Emotion is literally the way that our brains are wired, our body's wired, our nervous system is wired to telegraph meaning.

Emotion tells us what the facts mean to us, and that's why every decision we ever make is made by our emotion. Emotion is just telegraphed meaning. Again, we don't make decisions based on our rational analysis of something, we make decisions based on how the analysis makes us feel, because the feeling is telling us what that analysis means to us. And the meaning that we read into things comes from one place and one place only, and that is what our past experience has taught us those things mean. It's all biology.

KARIN: But some people perceive themselves as rational, relying on logic to make decisions, and accuse others of being highly emotional.

LISA: Well, define emotional. What does that even mean? A strong feeling? Emotional sounds like it means a bad nebulous thing that's over the top and has nothing to do with logic or rationality—two things that are opposites. Biologically, that isn't true. It's a great model, because it makes us feel safe secure, but it just isn't true. That's why I love brain science so much, if you dive into the biology of how and why we feel emotion and what emotion does.

KARIN: So, both of these people—the “rational” one and the “emotional” one—are more similar than they are different?

LISA: Oh, 100%. The example that I always give is the guy Elliot whom neuroscientist Antonio Damasio was evaluating, because he'd had part of his pre-frontal cortex removed when they took out benign brain cancer. At that point, his life completely fell apart. He lost his job, he lost his family, he lost his money to con men. What Damasio discovered was that he'd lost the ability to feel and process emotion, and so he could enumerate every possibility of any question or problem asked of him. He couldn't pick one, because emotion is what allows you to pick. Emotion telegraphs meaning. And Elliot was someone who would've never said he made decisions based on emotion, ever.

KARIN: That’s fascinating.

LISA: Obviously, he's male. He was brought up in that male notion of, “Be careful of emotion, don't feel it, because emotion is weakness.” Western society equates emotion with weakness. And when we think about the word emotional, we know which societally defined gender it's applied to, because men are afraid of women. I think men are afraid of women, because women are way more powerful than men. The irony is that because women are allowed the full gamut of emotion, it makes women so much smarter than men, because what any evolutionary biologist, evolutionary psychologist or neuroscientist will tell you is that the smartest among us aren't people who are good factually, who can rationally go in and figure and analyze and do it just with data. The smartest among us are people who are emotionally intelligent, who can read other people. That's what genuine intelligence is.

Obviously, women have way more of that than men, not because men couldn't have it. It's not like there's some biological reason why women have it more than men, it's just that in our societal construct, women are allowed to feel every feeling, and men are allowed to feel about four. Like anger and pride. It's just the conditioning, which is what gender is.

KARIN: I can really feel your underlying frustration that fuels this book.

LISA: I realized that what I really wanted to do is smash the patriarchy. I wrote Story or Die to do that, because the way that we get people to change their minds or open up is through story, meaning narrative. We tend to think of story as a novel or a movie or once upon a time, and I don't mean that at all.

We make sense of things through narrative, and the only way to change anybody is to change their narrative, and the only way to do that is for them to change it, not us. Not with facts but by creating a story, by creating something that speaks narrative to narrative. People don't listen until they feel heard and it doesn't mean you just hear what they're saying to you, but you go deeper and you understand why they believe what they believe and then you can feel what they feel. You can feel that same feeling that they feel given what they believe. Once you've got that, you can create a story that can change how they see things, provided it's not such a core belief that nothing could possibly touch it.

KARIN: Who are you hoping to reach?

I'd like to reach everyone. It's literally how to change someone's mind, anybody's mind about anything, and I think the really good thing about it is that it helps instill empathy. Because when we really understand why someone's doing something, even if what we think that they're doing is horrible, to some degree it gives us empathy, because we get the why behind it.



Buy the book!

To learn more about Lisa Cron visit her
site.

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A Conversation with Barbara Abercrombie

This month I had the great pleasure of interviewing Barbara Abercrombie, a writer and longtime beloved teacher of memoir at UCLA Extension Writers' Program. After knowing Barbara's name for years, I finally had the chance to meet her last February at the San Miguel Writers' Conference in Mexico where we were both teaching. Now looking back, it feels like an alternate magical reality we experienced, remarkably fleeting, just days before our world shifted into lockdown.

Barbara's new book, The Language of Loss, drops next week. It is a compilation of poetry and prose writings that Barbara collected about grief and loss—the book she says she was yearning for after her husband died five years ago. In our conversation below, she shares about what goes into publishing an anthology, along with her terrific insights about the craft of memoir.


Barbara Abercrombie has published novels, children’s picture books, including the award winning Charlie Anderson, and books of non-fiction. Her personal essays have appeared in national publications as well as in many anthologies. Her most recent books on writing, A Year of Writing Dangerously and Kicking in The Wall, were chosen by Poets & Writers Magazine as two of the best books for writers.

New World Library will publish her 16th book, The Language of Loss, an anthology of poetry and prose for grieving and celebrating the love of one’s life, in November 2020.

Barbara received the Outstanding Instructor award and the Distinguished Instructor Award at UCLA Extension where she teaches creative writing. She lives in Los Angeles and Lake Arrowhead with her rescue dogs, Nina and Nelson.

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KARIN GUTMAN: You mention that you wrote the book you wished you had when your husband died. Can you share more about your experience and how this book came about?

BARBARA ABERCROMBIE: My way through bad times is always to read, and when my husband died five and a half years ago what I wanted and needed to read was a book of poetry and prose about grieving for a spouse/ lover/ partner. I couldn’t find an anthology with that focus so I decided to create my own—The Language of Loss. I spent months reading a lot of memoir and also poetry—and then I did the hard part—getting permissions. Most of the material has been published before. There are amazing poets in it: Mary Oliver, E.E. Cummings, Joy Harjo, Naomi Shihab Nye, and Charles Bukowski. And writers: C.S. Lewis, Patti Smith, Abigail Thomas, and Joyce Maynard. I’m in love with the writers and poets in it.

KARIN: How challenging, or not, was it to garner the interest of a publisher? Did you have a strong hand in editing it?

BARBARA: My agent liked my book proposal and sold it to New World Library (a wonderful publishing company who had brought my books on writing into the world.) I edited the book—choosing all the material—and then created an arc through abject grief to getting through it and finally to celebrating the love one lost. My editor at NWL offered suggestions and my copy editor (whom I owe my soul to) caught all my typos and mistakes.

KARIN: What are the legalities for putting a compilation together like this one? Do you have any advice for people who might like to do something similar?

BARBARA: I had to get permission for everything I used, and to pay for much of it. I don’t do well with paper work and it was a long slog—copyrights had to be traced, sometimes I also needed UK rights, and sometimes it took numerous emails to get publishers to reply. I had a real passion though to get this book published. It’s the only one of its kind, so all of the slog was more than worth it.

KARIN: As a longtime teacher of memoir, how do you approach (or suggest) writers begin the process of writing their personal story?

BARBARA: I suggest writing out the story from start to finish. I call this the WTF draft. I also think it’s important to take a good memoir class where you’ll get inspired when you get stuck and learn the basics of craft. A class where you feel safe to write anything and the teacher is in control of comments—meaning that no one gets snarky and everyone feels supported. We’re all so vulnerable writing memoir! I tell my students that all feedback to each other must be honest and detailed but also generous and always aware of the potential of what’s being read. And that the experience and behavior is not to be critiqued, just the writing.

KARIN: What do you believe are the most important aspects when it comes to the craft of memoir? What do you find to be the most challenging things to master?

BARBARA: The tone/the voice.
(This never gets easy no matter how many books you write.)
The story you’re writing, not just the feelings.
The structure.
The take away, the universal thread to your experience.

Writing memoir is challenging, period.

KARIN: Writers in my workshops tend to generate a lot of material and can sometimes get frustrated that it’s not all adding up to something. In other words, the bigger telling still remains elusive. What would you say to that?

BARBARA: I ask my students, “What is the knot you’re trying to unravel in this story?” And anything that doesn’t connect to that knot should be cut. If a scene doesn’t serve the story and connect to the larger story, or add to understanding the characters—cut.

KARIN: Do you have any tips on how to approach structure?

BARBARA: I have absolutely no tips on structure! There are no rules or guidelines—each writer has to find structure for him/herself. And you find it by writing. Okay, one tip: Read. Study how other writers do it. That’s how you learn to write anything.

KARIN: I also find that writers can get hung up on TENSEwhether they should write in present or past tense, or whether they can move back and forth. What would you say?

BARBARA: I personally like to write memoir in present tense—yes, it feels more alive. And then do all memories/flashbacks in past tense. I’ve found that perspective can work in present tense. Realizations, epiphanies can happen in real time.

KARIN: What do you think is the biggest hurdle to publishing a memoir and what is your advice on that front?

BARBARA: The biggest hurdle may be to have a subject that will connect with other people and how to tell the story so it will connect. How your story—though not necessarily identical—can give the reader their own story. I think this is hard in the beginning because our WTF draft is basically telling us our own story and, let’s face it, is therapy writing. So after the first draft it’s a matter of rewriting, coming up with a book proposal that will grab an agent or editor’s interest, and following that up with a polished manuscript.

KARIN: The issue of privacy and personal ethics naturally often comes up. What do you say to someone who is afraid to share their story for fear of alienating family members, or worse, being sued?

BARBARA: Ah, we all worry about this. I don’t think we should write out of revenge, but if someone in your life has behaved badly and this is part of the story you’re telling, you own this experience. It’s your right to write what they said and did, letting them get nailed by their own actions and words. (No matter what, bear in mind that good writing is about generosity.) You have to believe that the story is worth whatever happens if published. Most people won’t be pleased with what you write about them, good or bad. Writers need to make their own boundaries when they write. My only boundary is not to write anything deeply personal about my children. Everyone else is fair game.

KARIN: Do you think a pseudonym is a good option?

BARBARA: Not unless there’s a really good reason and your publisher is okay with it. It’s important to remember as you write that no one will read this until you allow them to.

KARIN: Do you think fictionalizing is a good option?

BARBARA: No. I find the minute anyone starts to fictionalize a memoir, they get stuck and tangled up in what really happened. Fiction is a whole other talent. Writing fiction is to put on masks and veils and to feel free, living a whole other life in someone else’s skin. Of course in fiction you write about some of your own memories but you give them to someone else. On the other hand, one of my favorite novels is The Friend by Sigrid Nunez, whose protagonist has many characteristics of the author. But you need to be as talented as she is to pull it off.

KARIN: What would you say to someone who feels like they have a story in them to tellto potentially publishbut don’t necessarily have a background as a writer?

BARBARA: I’d say give it a try. Take a class. Start writing down bits and pieces of it. Think of your story as a quilt—scenes/memories as square patches in your quilt. Or find a ghost writer. But first my advice would be to simply write down the story.




Buy the book!

To learn more about Barbara Abercrombie, visit her site.

See all interviews

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Barbara Abercrombie & Jacqueline Winspear

In conversation with Monica Holloway

Vroman's Bookstore

Thursday, November 5th

6 p.m. PST


via Zoom.

Register here

 
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A Conversation with Daniel M. Jaffe

I have recently gotten curious about the, sometimes, fine line between memoir and fiction. What makes memoir memoir, and at what point does it become a fictional telling of the story? Also, if you are debating between the two, how do you decide on the best way to write your narrative?

I had the unique opportunity to explore these questions with esteemed author and teacher Daniel M. Jaffe, who is a profound source of wisdom. He refers to his newest novel, Yeled Tov, as an autobiographical novel. It follows a Jewish teenager struggling to reconcile his devotion to Torah with his growing attraction to other young men. In fact, Dan initially wrote it as a memoir, so he knows intimately the experience of writing the same story in both forms. Scroll down to read our full interview.


Daniel M. Jaffe is a former corporate/securities attorney turned writer. Several of his short stories have been nominated for a Pushcart Prize, and dozens of his stories, essays, and articles have appeared in anthologies, literary journals and newspapers in many countries and languages. His work has been taught in college and university courses. He holds degrees from Princeton University (A.B.), Harvard Law School (J.D.), and Vermont College (M.F.A.).

His newest novel, YELED TOV
 (2018, Lethe Press), follows a Jewish teenager struggling to reconcile his devotion to Torah with his growing attraction to other young men. Can he be both Jewish and gay? Does he risk losing God's love?  

 
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KARIN GUTMAN: We first met when I took your class at UCLA, “The Art of the Lie,” which used personal experience as a springboard for fiction. What inspired you to create such a course?

DANIEL M. JAFFE: Actually, I can’t take credit for having created that course. The now-retired Director of UCLA Extension’s Writers’ Program, Dr. Linda Venis, was an endless source of course ideas.  After I’d been teaching in the Program for a couple years, Linda approached me with this particular course idea and asked if I’d like to teach it. Given that I’d had experience writing both fiction and memoir (as personal essay), the course was a natural fit. So, Linda provided me the course description and then let me develop a syllabus so as to take the course in my own direction. A really wonderful opportunity.

KARIN: I understand that your most recent novel, Yeled Tov, was originally written as a memoir, but then you adapted it as a novel. What was the reason behind this decision?

DANIEL: The notion of writing Yeled Tov evolved over time, as did its ultimate form. Yeled Tov (“Good Boy”) is a novel about a Jewish teenager, Jake, struggling to reconcile his observant and traditional religious beliefs with the growing awareness of his gayness. As his experiences and guilt intensify, Jake holds imaginary conversations with God, who is basically a manifestation of Jake’s own conscience. When Jake reaches a point where he feels completely wicked and beyond redemption, as a biblical abomination, he imagines God turning His back on him, and Jake attempts suicide.

This is all autobiographical, my most central and agonizing personal story. Thirty years ago, when I first committed myself to writing, I made a conscious decision to concentrate on fiction rather than memoir because I felt that fiction could mask real experiences that felt too private to acknowledge publicly—such as my coming out struggle and suicide attempt—yet still offer the opportunity to write about them with emotional honesty. Also, I could minimize the potential for embarrassment of my parents and any others whose lives intersected with mine. Among other things, I indeed wrote a number of short stories about teenage characters struggling with a religious-sexual identity conflict, including one where the teenager contemplated suicide.

Over time, however, I found myself increasingly wishing to be known beyond the fictional façade, so I started writing memoiristic personal essays, some addressing my teenage coming out struggle. Eventually, after Dad passed away and Mom lost awareness due to dementia, I no longer needed to worry about embarrassing them by exposing a painful, intensely painful period in their lives. Also, I wanted to publish a book addressing a tragic reality: even today, LGBTQ youth sometimes kill themselves out of a misplaced sense of shame. One source of that shame is religious teachings, a phenomenon I was in a good position to address.

Sometimes I write just for fun and to entertain, but at other times I write in order to promote social change, hopefully to help people. This was one of those times. We all know that fiction or memoir about personal trauma can help readers in similar circumstances feel less alone. Our writing can offer hope and, if we’re lucky, save lives.

So, I spent a couple of years writing a full-length memoir about my teenage struggle. One day when meeting with my publisher over lunch (he’d already published three of my books by then), I proudly announced what I’d written. Without so much as looking at the manuscript, he said, “Dan, gay memoir doesn’t really sell anymore. But if you re-write it as a novel—that I can sell.”

Hah! So now I’d come full circle: a process that had started as fiction, then shifted into memoir, now needed to return to fiction. So, I spent a year re-conceptualizing and re-writing, and the result is Yeled Tov, very much a novel rather than a memoir. What’s so interesting is that when interviewing me about this fictional work, the Israeli newspaper, Haaretz, was most interested in its autobiographical aspects. They even published photographs of me with my parents so as to make the social-political point that an observant Jewish family can welcome a gay child. Fiction and memoir are completely blurred in this project.

KARIN: Do you think that’s true, that a gay memoir is not saleable?

DANIEL: As much as I feel a modest authority in discussing the writing of fiction and memoir, I feel absolutely no authority whatsoever in discussing the marketplace. I haven’t a clue as to what will sell and what won’t. All I know how to do is write.

That said, I think my publisher’s reluctance was specific to the topic of gay-themed memoir, rather than memoir in general. Even more specifically—memoirs about coming out. There are an awful lot of them out there, which is wonderful. I suppose those that sell best are those written by famous people. I can understand that—celebrity sells. And I ain’t no celebrity.

But this phenomenon is not limited to memoir. In my early years as writer, in the 1990’s, I wrote a couple of coming-out-themed novels loosely based on my experience, but not nearly as autobiographical as Yeled Tov. The late 1980’s-early 1990’s was a boom time for lesbian and gay fiction—our work was being taken seriously by the New York publishing establishment for the first time. One editor who was in charge of a major publisher’s lesbian-gay line of fiction kindly read one of my novels, but rejected it saying something about being tired of coming-out novels. He, as editor, was probably inundated with every single coming out novel being written at the time. But the general public? I, as one reader back then, couldn’t get enough of them. Every person’s coming-out experience is unique, and I found it incredibly soothing to read each and every such story I could get my hands on, as a sort of validation of my own struggles, a sense of camaraderie. But… it wasn’t up to me, it was up to this editor who had all the power. He was tired of the subject, so he assumed his readership was, as well. Maybe he was right. We’ll never know.

KARIN: Do you miss anything from its original iteration as a memoir?

DANIEL: Certainly, I had to cut out a lot from the memoir. The approach I took in the memoir was that of a middle-aged man looking back on his youth and re-visiting, interpreting. I could have taken a similar stance with the novel, but my publisher felt that a simpler, more direct approach would be better, particularly since he wanted to promote it to a late teen readership. So, a good deal of the memoir is gone, the self-conscious analysis that often marks what I think of as strong memoir.

Initially, while re-writing the material as fiction, I felt pain at cutting much material.  I think it’s Annie Dillard in her incredibly insightful book, The Writing Life, who points out that, before we can truly cut material out of a draft and just move on to write what’s best for the work, we need to forget the pain of having written our treasured lines. Gradually, as I developed new material and re-shaped, I forgot the pain and time and effort spent on writing what I now had to cut out.  The novel became its own entity, and I stopped focusing on what it wasn’t.

KARIN: Do you think writing the memoir help make the fictional version better?

DANIEL: I think I could have written Yeled Tov directly as novel. Whether the memoir form as “first draft” ultimately made the fiction stronger or not, I can’t tell. To be perfectly honest, I no longer remember details of the memoir version. It’s as if the novel over-wrote and erased it.

KARIN: What new things did you discover in the fictional story? What liberties did you take, that hopefully, made it a better story?

DANIEL: Whether the novel or memoir is a “better” story or not, I can’t say. But they’re certainly “different” from one another.

As I mentioned a little earlier, the structure changed in that the memoir was reminiscent—an adult looking back at his life, whereas the novel simply follows the teenager forward from late high school through early college.

In terms of liberties, the novel version freed me up to write a different outcome for the character.  In real life, I didn’t quickly heal after my college suicide attempt. I continued to suffer and struggle for years. In the memoir, I made clear that eventually, I did find an inner peace, I found a wonderful man—Leo and I have been together now for over 26 years, legally married for over 6—and found profound acceptance by family and community. Given that the memoir’s focus was on my teen years, I didn’t need to go into detail about my adult life in order to make the story complete. The reader could accept the story as limited to a difficult time, and could also accept that the difficulty eased later on even if I didn’t write about that; after all, I was alive and writing, so the reader knew I hadn’t ultimately killed myself.

Certainly, I could have ended the novel with some sort of leap forward in time to show Jake, the main character, finding happiness years later. But that would have violated the way I handled time in the novel, which was moment-by-moment during two years of Jake’s life. And such an ending would have felt rather forced.

Another option would have been to have Jake succumb to his depression. But that was exactly opposite the message I wanted to offer readers, particularly younger ones. Up until the late 20th-century, so many LGBTQ-themed novels ended in suicide or death. Enough! The whole point of writing this novel was to suggest that LGBTQ people could find ways to thrive even after experiencing difficult personal struggles.

So, I needed to come up with an ending that fit with the novel’s handling of time, yet didn’t have some false, sudden turn-around where years of suffering magically transformed into happiness. Such an ending would have trivialized the very suffering Jake had experienced. What I came up with was a series of post-suicide-attempt conversations for Jake with family, friends, a therapist, and God, all of whom are saddened by the suicide attempt. Up until the suicide attempt, he torments himself within himself, never reaching out to another person. After the attempt, when others are now reaching out to him, he can’t avoid such conversations. They get him out of his own head, and help him realize that there might be different ways of looking at his situation, at Jewish religious teachings, and his future. That’s how the novel ends, with Jake finally beginning to connect authentically with the people around him and beginning to accept the possibility—just the possibility—that he’s not such an awful person, that he might fit within Jewish tradition, and that his future might not be as bleak as he’s imagined. By the end of the novel, he has earned something he had not possessed until then—hope.

KARIN: I believe that there is a healing component to writing. Did you experience that with this book, a kind of personal transformation in the writing of it?

DANIEL: Oh my gosh, this is so true for me. I experience healing in my writing all the time.  No matter what we’re writing, it’s coming from our psyches, so it’s us on the page. Whether we have happy dreams when we sleep or nightmares, we’re working out some issue or other, right?  It’s the same with writing. We’re processing. We don’t always reach clarities, but we’re wrestling with our angels and demons both.

In Yeled Tov, after Jake’s suicide attempt, he finally confides in another Jewish character that he attempted to end his life as a reaction to the Torah’s prohibition against homosexuality. The other character responds, “My dear friend… We’re supposed to live by the Torah, not die by it.” Here I’d been writing for years about my own life, yet I’d never articulated and distilled that thought until the very moment my fictional character said it.

I never had such a conversation with a Jewish friend in real life. Nobody ever said line that to me. I never even voiced it to myself. Yet at the very moment I wrote it, I experienced an epiphany… 40 years after my own suicide attempt. It came out of my writing through a fictional character’s voice. And I don’t mean it came from the character based on myself; it came out of a character loosely based on an actual friend from my past, an observant Jewish woman of great compassion. After I wrote that sentence, I lifted my hands from the keyboard, covered my face, and wept. Finally I was able to say, in one sentence, the healing phrase I’d been needing to hear all these decades. Decades. It’s become my mantra. This is the personal power of writing fiction.

KARIN: What do you like to read? What are you reading these days?

I read all kinds of things. Novels, short story collections, memoirs, histories, plays. Sometimes, I do background reading related to projects I have in mind. I’ve been reading some memoirs by former Soviet dissidents because I’m considering writing a memoir about my experiences in the late 1970’s and early 1980’s when I studied for a short time in the Soviet Union and met various dissidents. Once I began studying in law school, I undertook to translate documents for them—political trial transcripts and so forth—so as to advocate for their causes in the West. An old friend of mine, Alla Podrabinek, recently completed a memoir of her life in Siberian exile with her dissident husband, Aleksandr. I loved reading that one, both for elaborations on what I remembered of their lives and for episodes that were new to me. And I’m now reading a classic dissident memoir, My Testimony by Anatoly Marchenko, one of the first memoirs of life in the Soviet gulag. I read/am reading these in Russian so as to brush up on my language skills.  Reading a foreign language helps with my English prose because it keeps me sensitive to word choice, sentence structure rhythm, and tone.

I’m also reading a collection of Philip Roth’s prose writings—essays, interviews with him, and interviews he conducted with other writers. Several reviewers have compared my writing with his, so I enjoy reading his take on his own work.

I recently finished a collection of short stories by Louis Auchincloss, a remarkable fiction writer known for his spot-on renderings of New York high society. I’d long heard of him, but had never read him before. I bought a book of his stories in a used book shop in Merced, so that I’d have something to read during a trip to Yosemite. Now I’m a fan!

KARIN: What advice would you give to a writer who is not sure whether to write the story as fiction or memoir?

I think of autobiographical fiction and memoir as being on a continuum. Some autobiographical fiction is loosely based on real life. Some memoir takes liberties with facts in order to render psychological truth more clearly. They’re definitely related forms and they blur. It’s often difficult to find a bright line between them. I think it’s a question of emphasis, and of how we want to hold the work out to the world. As I mentioned a little earlier, if we label something “memoir,” the reader makes certain assumptions about the writer’s life after the period covered in the work because the reader knows facts not covered in the actual memoir—the author survived Soviet labor camps, for example. After reading a novel, the reader might speculate about the main characters’ futures, but can’t really know for sure.

Maybe the wisest way to start writing a story based on real life experience is to dive in and write it however it comes out on the page. As you’re drafting, ask yourself if you’re altering what really happened, and why. Are you censoring yourself, avoiding writing down some painful things? Are you trying to “protect” real people in your life? (Keep in mind that there’s a difference between writing memoir and publishing it—you can always write and explore something yet wait until some later date to seek publication, if ever.) Can you bring yourself to write what you’re avoiding, or do you need to mask or avoid it for some reason? Answering these questions might help you figure out whether your work is more made-up than not, where on the memoir-fiction continuum it fits.

KARIN: When you say that "some memoir takes liberties with facts," what do you mean exactly?

DANIEL: What I meant is something like recording a conversation that happened years ago.  We can imagine a scenario where, in real life, there were 10 people in a room during an important conversation, and each chimed in, and the narrator gleaned an epiphany from that input.  In real life, when we know a large number of people very well, we can react instantly to each comment because we have so much context for each person's reaction.  We intuitively weigh Cousin X's comments more than Cousin Y's because Cousin X is a therapist and Cousin Y is generally obtuse, but maybe this time Cousin Y makes an unusually good point, and Aunt A amplifies that point and the narrator weighs Aunt A's reaction heavily because she's always been so insightful, in contrast to Uncle D who's chiming in but he's always been an idiot, etc.

To include all this and more, all these comments and the narrator's reactions might be confusing for a reader because, in a memoir, we likely wouldn't have the space to fully develop each of those 10 people well enough so that the reader could grasp the narrator's intuitive reactions. So, in writing the memoir, in order to keep focus on the psychological truth and what's important--a group of relatives got together and influenced the narrator's thinking--the memoir might describe that conversation with only 3 relatives having been in that room. Taking liberties with the facts to render with greater clarity what's really important.

But here's where taking liberties would violate the psychological truth: if we're writing a memoir episode of a 7-year-old boy who stole a Babe Ruth candy bar, but we write, instead, that he stole a Cadillac... well, yes, both versions are about a little boy stealing, but they represent very different psychological dynamics. It's a question of proportion and degree.

KARIN: Are you still teaching? Where can people take a class from you?

I teach less now than in the past. This February 29, I’ll be offering a one-day workshop through UCLA Extension Writers’ Program called, “Inspiring Our Muse: Nurturing the Writer Within.” It’s a course about the writing process, about sparking our imagination and tapping into our creativity. There are still spots available, should any of your readers care to sign up!




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To learn more about Daniel M. Jaffe, 
visit his website.

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