Five Fake Memoirs That Fooled the Literary World
Fiction was stranger than truth in these examples of authentic autobiographies that were anything but that
- By Lyn Garrity
- Smithsonian.com, December 20, 2010, Subscribe
Telling the unvarnished truth in an autobiography or memoir is no small feat. The urge to slip in embellishments or heighten a dramatic arc through exaggeration can be hard to resist, especially when aiming for a compelling life story. But the past few decades have seen an increase in an entirely different category of memoir—the hoax, where the truth, if it’s even present, is of little consequence. Here are five stunning examples of literary fraud.
1. A Million Little Pieces by James Frey
The 19th-century American humorist Josh Billings once said “There are some people who are so addicted to exaggeration that they can’t tell the truth without lying” His observation might well have described writer James Frey, who fabricated large parts of his so-called memoir, A Million Little Pieces, a gritty account of his struggles with alcohol and drug addiction. Though to be fair Frey had presented the book initially as a novel, publishers only developed interest in it after it was described as a true story, looking to meet the reading public’s hunger for hard-luck memoirs.
The 2003 memoir became a huge bestseller after Oprah Winfrey selected it for her TV show book club in 2005, but quickly turned into a major literary scandal that next year. As allegations grew about its many inventions and falsifications (Frey claimed he had spent 87 days in jail when he had been imprisoned for only a few hours), Oprah had the writer back on the show to castigate him for lying. In 2008, Frey made a literary comeback with his best-selling novel, Bright Shiny Morning.
2. Love and Consequences by Margaret B. Jones
After the uproar over James Frey’s A Million Little Pieces, publishers would have been well served to vigorously vet memoirs, but this 2008 account about a part American Indian foster child immersed in gang life in South Central Los Angeles managed to reel in both its publisher and glowing reviews before it was discovered that none of it was true. In reality the author Margaret Seltzer, who had used the pseudonym Margaret B. Jones, was white, grew up with her biological family in Sherman Oaks, an affluent Los Angeles neighborhood, and had attended private school.
Seltzer’s sister revealed the Love and Consequences memoir as a phony, after seeing a profile about Seltzer in the New York Times. Seltzer later justified her deception, “I thought it was an opportunity to put a voice to people who people don’t listen to.” The publisher recalled the 19,000 copies of the book.
3. Misha: A Memoire of the Holocaust Years by Misha Defonseca
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Comments (3)
And not to forget Rigoberta Menchu, whose semifictional autobiographical writings probably got her the Nobel Peace Prize.
Posted by charles on February 28,2011 | 08:03 PM
As someone else has already written, "The Education of Little Tree" is another hoax memoir.
Another, which was first self-published by the author as fact, then later published as fiction, is "Mutant Messenger from Down Under".
Posted by Brenda Van Scoy on February 6,2011 | 05:31 PM
The Education of Little Tree is a great example of this. A touching story of a Native American boy being raised by his grandparents was actually written by a white supremacist.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Education_of_Little_Tree
Posted by Andy on January 12,2011 | 11:17 AM