I wrote about this at my blog a few days ago and clearly struck a chord because I got linked to all over the place and saw a huge spike in visitors (how cool!). I have written a book based on my experiences working in Ops for a small bush commuter in Alaska. Flying Cold is about all the insane flying that was done to support a broken down airline and how dangerous it was, and how damned cold, and how funny. Basically, it is the truth because that is what flying in AK is like. But.....I wrote about guys busting FAA regs left and right and so clearly wasn’t going to correctly identify them. Plus, who remembers what all of our conversations were back then? And who remembers why some guys did somethings? And - well - some stuff that happened at other commuters was interesting too and I wanted to include those stories. So I gathered it all and wrote an honest book about professional pilots in AK, but I didn’t write nonfiction.
There’s a huge difference there.
The problem for me has been that agents and one major publisher have shown interest - have said they are interested - but only if I change it to nonfiction. Only if I “change the names”. And since I won’t do this, I’m still shopping it around. When I wrote about all this (in light of James Frey) I heard from a bunch of authors with the same problem. We want to call our books fiction, the pubs and agents want to buy it as memoir.
So here’s my question: just what the hell is a memoir? Can’t a novel have elements of truth (seem true) and be just as effective? Why are we so memoir crazy in this country lately? And how do we change this - how do we convince publishers to publish novels again with the same excitement as memoir?
Has anyone else run into this problem?
