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Reviews for Inventing the truth

 Inventing the truth magazine reviews

The average rating for Inventing the truth based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.has a rating of 4 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2018-11-01 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 5 stars Christen Caos
If you're looking for tips on writing a memoir, or just enjoy memoirs in general and want to read what may be behind some, this is the book! I really enjoyed all of the essays here included, I am always reading about memoir writing, its really one of my pastimes, and this will be included in my recommendations if anyone asks me over dinner for a good book on memoirs.
Review # 2 was written on 2017-08-09 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 3 stars Ray Chadwell
In this anthology of writers' memoirs, we meet many different sort of writers, journalists, novelists, professors at universities who teach all sorts of things not necessarily related to writing but have all written a memoir of some type or other. Each writer discusses why they wrote from the angle they chose. Russell Bake decided to narrow his memoir to his relationship with his mother and her impact on his life. This meant leaving out most of his life, but allowed a straight line to take the reader from A to B without getting side tracked. Some writers had interesting childhoods. Jill Ker Conway, a professor, wrote about growing up in Australia. She shares what motivated her to write about her complicated, personal relationships and the challenges of rising through the echelons of a University as a woman. Alfred Kazin writes of growing up inside the Jewish culture in Brooklyn. His objective is to get the reader to see every stoop, traffic sign and the smells coming from the restaurants and see the people brushing by on the crowded streets. Toni Morrison believes everyone should look at their historical self, the actual history and the perceptual as a minority. She believes black writers have two objectives: to say this is my personal history, but also the history of my race. Annie Dillard doesn't believe in memoirs but rather that we should use our personal experiences to write our stories, so, according to her, it follows that every story a writer pens is really a memoir on some level. Each writer offers their own perspective and insight in how to write about one's life or at least aspects of it. Ironically, when I read samples of some of these writers' books on commercial sites, I didn't find their writing very interesting. Which goes to show that one can write well about a topic without necessarily living up to another person's expectations of that topic. This book however will be of interest to anyone interested in writing and receiving the ideas and thoughts of successful, published writers.


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