Is my work fiction or non-fiction?
I am currently working on a story. I would like to publish this on a literary magazine website, and this website has only three categories - fiction, non-fiction, and poetry.
My story is probably not poetry, even though I do pay attention to form and word choice and extreme personification.
My story is not really fiction, because the narrator is me, and all the characters are based on real people, and the experiences are real experiences. I just change the names to protect my privacy. The narrator's name in the story is also the author's pen name.
That leaves only non-fiction. But non-fiction doesn't seem to fit either. The exact course of events in the story has never really happened in my personal life, but each piece does come from my personal life. The other characters are based on real people, but I don't have a tape recorder with me all the time, so much of the dialogue is based on what I think/remember what the people said at one time. And the extreme personification and attention to form make the entire work sound like free verse poetry. In the story, I personify a concept. Also in the story, I intentionally break a sentence's flow for the sake of form.
I don't know where mine fits.
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2 answers
It's fiction.
It's probably closest to memoir, which is basically autobiography, a type of non-fiction. But then you say:
The exact course of events in the story has never really happened in my personal life, but each piece does come from my personal life. The other characters are based on real people...
If you're not certain (or if you'd really like to submit it as non-fiction), ask the publisher.
It's fiction based on real life. Your goal is the story and your inspiration is reality. But you aren't trying to document the historical record. It may be thinly disguised fiction, but it's still fiction.
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While it sounds like what you're writing is not Creative Nonfiction, this essay about it may help clarify your self-description: https://www.creativenonfiction.org/online-reading/what-creative-nonfiction
"Creative” doesn’t mean inventing what didn’t happen, reporting and describing what wasn’t there. It doesn’t mean that the writer has a license to lie. The cardinal rule is clear—and cannot be violated. This is the pledge the writer makes to the reader—the maxim we live by, the anchor of creative nonfiction: “You can’t make this stuff up!”
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