Fumbling toward FICTION

Okay, here goes.  I’ve been diddling my way into another attempt at a longer go of writing, and today have decided, (largely by the courage of company – Tocksin has also begun posting portions of a novelistic go) to post a few rudimentary fragments.  Up until yesterday  the working title was simply FICTION.  I’ve written 3-5 chapters over the past month or two and in seeking an orientation for the work certain symbols and recurrences have led to an inquiry.  ”Write about what you want to know” Lance Olsen says, and I can see I’m searching after something in these words.  The epigraphs that shoot me on are the following…

“Reality is the motif”

-Wallace Stevens-

“The universe was the glue that held him together”

-Jonathan Lethem-

“I only care about fiction that raises the question of what fiction is…”

-R. M. Berry-

“The line is only a shadow cast by one (memory or fiction) over the other (fiction or memory).  Once I place memory into language, memory becomes a rumor that makes room for uncertainty.  Memory slips into fiction but then fiction becomes memory once again in an/other way…It is difficult to separate fiction from memory, which is different from separating truth from lying.”

-Doug Rice-

and so it begins…

Family 1

Family 12Family 13

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14 thoughts on “Fumbling toward FICTION

  1. tocksin says:

    This is truely exciting, to be excited about mere words, call it crazy.

  2. N Filbert says:

    we may indeed be…thanks

  3. tocksin says:

    You possess an academic flair that longs for poetry.

  4. Love the fragmented form. Tocksin is correct: very poetic.

  5. simonhlilly says:

    Love it. Open and dense at the same time. Spinning off and coming back. Sneakily building a picture of something, somehow more real for not being persistently precise, or is it precisely persistent? The eyeball moves fifty times a second, taking in little bits of information. A jigsaw that makes the world. Just a bit like this.

  6. john zande says:

    Really interesting style. It’s like still frames, slides. Impressed, I am!

  7. N Filbert says:

    thank you Simon…here’s to keeping it up.

  8. N Filbert says:

    has a jacket-y ring to it – thanks

  9. N Filbert says:

    AND feels like a succinct appraisal of what happens in me when i’m writing

  10. This is really great writing, Nathan. I’m off to part deuce!

  11. N Filbert says:

    thank you…when i add or review i question hard its “readability”. Let me know your thoughts.

"Authors frequently say things they are unaware of; only after they have gotten the reactions of their readers do they discover what they have said" - Umberto Eco

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