All autobiographers are unreliable narrators. Yet what a writer
chooses to misrepresent is as telling -- perhaps even more so -- as
what really happened. Timothy Adams believes that autobiography is
an attempt to reconcile one's life with one's self, and he argues
in this book that autobiography should not be taken as historically
accurate but as metaphorically authentic.
Adams focuses on five modern American writers whose autobiographies
are particularly complex because of apparent lies that permeate
them. In examining their stories, Adams shows that lying in
autobiography, especially literary autobiography, is not simply
inevitable. Rather it is often a deliberate, highly strategic
decision on the author's part.
Throughout his analysis, Adams's standard is not literal accuracy
but personal authenticity. He attempts to resolve some of the
paradoxes of recent autobiographical theory by looking at the
classic question of design and truth in autobiography from the
underside -- with a focus on lying rather than truth.
Originally published in 1990.
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