- Publisher: Acre Books
- Available in: Paperback, eBook
- ISBN: 978-1-946724-36-6
In fifteen sharply engaging essays, acclaimed novelist and story writer Brock Clarke examines the art (and artifice) of fiction from unpredictable and entertaining angles, positing through a slant scrutiny of place, voice, and syntax (“very: is there a weaker, sadder, more futile word in the English language?”) what fiction can—and can’t—do.
Clarke supports his case with passages by and about writers who have both influenced and irritated him, and pieces such as “What the Cold Can Teach Us,” “The Case for Meanness,” “Why Good Literature Makes Us Bad People,” and “The Novel is Dead; Long Live the Novel” celebrate the achievements of master practitioners such as Muriel Spark, Joy Williams, Donald Barthelme, Flannery O’Connor, Paul Beatty, George Saunders, John Cheever, and Colson Whitehead.
Of particular interest to Clarke is the contentious divide between fiction and memoir, which he investigates using recent and relevant critical arguments, also tackling ancillary forms such as “fictional memoir” and the autobiographical novel.
Anecdotal and unabashed, rigorous and piercingly perceptive—not to mention flat-out funny—I, Grape; or The Case for Fiction is a love letter to and a passionate defense of the discipline to which its author has devoted his life and mind, as well as an attempt to eff the ineffable: “That is one of the basic tenets of this book: when we write fiction, surprising things sometimes happen, especially when fiction writers take advantage of their chosen form’s contrarian ability to surprise.”
PRAISE FOR I, GRAPE
“Novelist Clarke chronicles in this whimsical outing his obsession with fiction as an art form. . . . This impassioned defense of fiction is great for dipping into, and those who engage with fiction on a deep level will find much here that piques.”
—Publisher’s Weekly