Friday, November 19, 2010
Literary Blog Hop: Is there such a thing as literary nonfiction?
...Is there!? And how, I say! I, however, am a fan of bending the term "nonfiction." To some extent, I would almost say that poetry can be considered nonfiction-- especially haiku or other nature-focused poetry. Let's have a look-see at my super crush, old W.B:
I will arise and go now, and go to Innisfree,
And a small cabin build there, of clay and wattles made:
Nine bean-rows will I have there, a hive for the honey-bee;
And live alone in the bee-loud glade.
And I shall have some peace there, for peace comes dropping slow,
Dropping from the veils of the morning to where the cricket sings;
There midnight's all a glimmer, and noon a purple glow,
And evening full of the linnet's wings.
I will arise and go now, for always night and day
I hear lake water lapping with low sounds by the shore;
While I stand on the roadway, or on the pavements grey,
I hear it in the deep heart's core.
...Siiigh. Oh, Yeats. Here he is, talking to us about the peace and quiet of his beautiful spot overlooking the beautiful isle (fun fact: my parents' first sailboat was called Innisfree. Fun fact 2: I have a self-taken picture of said isle somewhere in a box; I'll have to dig that out)....
how is this not nonfiction? If the definition of nonfiction is simply Truth, then I daresay this is very much literary nonfiction.
To be slightly less definition-bending with my answer, then my answer is still yes. How about Under the Tuscan Sun? How about travelogues in general? Pete McCarthy's awesome book McCarthy's Bar is humorous to be sure, but that makes it no less literary: he's soul-searching, and isn't that what literary-ness (yes, that's a word) is all about? And that book is surely considered nonfiction.
What about books on writing? Lamott's Bird by Bird, Berg's Escaping into the Open, even Wood's How Fiction Works. I would call these literary nonfiction, too: they're beautifully written, they inspire-- literary for sure! And also, definitely nonfiction.
Hear ye, hear ye: yes! there IS such a thing as literary nonfiction!
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Great examples. I enjoyed Under the Tuscan Sun and love Anne Lamott's books. Haven't seen McCarthy's Bar - it sounds like fun!
ReplyDeleteI agree. Love your examples. I just don't read very much nonfiction. (This hop is killing me. All those books out there I haven't read!)
ReplyDeleteHa ha. I like your post! I wouldn't consider poetry as non-fiction myself, but I love your explanation about it.
ReplyDeletehttp://leeswammes.wordpress.com
Leeswammes (Judith)
Great answer! I hadn't thought to categorize poetry as non-fiction, but that makes sense. And your other examples are really good too.
ReplyDeleteRose City Reader
of all things, innisfree:-)))) love it...
ReplyDeleteYes, yes, yes, yes, yes! I agree with all you write. I especially love your thoughts about poetry being the greatest kind of nonfiction. Poetry as Truth. Nontruth being the greatest Truth. Beautiful.
ReplyDeleteHere's my post on literary nonfiction. I'd love to hear what you think.
And if you have read any wonderful literary books
published in 2010, I urge you to nominate your favorites
for The Independent Literary Awards. The awards
include categories of Literary Fiction and Literary Non-Fiction.
Nominations close December 15.
I liked Under the Tuscan Sun but I thought a few parts were a little cheesy ... like when she described a grape or something? Anyway, I was interested to see you mentioned Lamott. I have to read her book Traveling Mercies for a class and I'm not sure if I should be excited about it or not. What do you think?
ReplyDeleteAs I write poetry, I fully endorse that poetry IS non-fiction. Unadulterated...!!!
ReplyDeleteHere is my Literary Blog Hop post!
Visiting from the Literary Hop! I love that you included a poem; Yeats' writing is so beautiful. I've wanted to read Lamott's book.
ReplyDelete@JoAnn --McCarthy's Bar is TONS of fun. He wrote another one, too, which I haven't read but which I've meant to pick up since I read McCarthy's Bar. I super recommend him-- and not just because I'm a huge Iro-phile.
ReplyDelete@parrish latnern --we're definitely in this idea together! Honestly, I hadn't really thought about poetry as nonfiction until this lit hop question arose but it seems to make sense to me, quite naturally.
@IngridLola -- I haven't read Traeling Mercies, but Bird by Bird is an absolute classic. If Traveling Mercies has any of the delightful essence that Birds has, I think you'll likely be in for something good. Plus, reading books for classes is fun because you know you're going to get something out of it in the end (when discussion time comes around), even if you have to tough it out during the actual reading part. Good luck! But I bet you won't need it ;)
@thebookstop -- Yeats! woot!