James Frey's publisher says
it don't make no diff'rence whether
A Million Little Pieces is "true" or "really happened" or is "full of shit" or "as exaggerated as the CIA's report of WMDs in Iraq."
Know why? Because they have
sold over 3.4 million copies of the so-called memoir. Let's do the math. Let's see, 3.4 million copies.... Let's just pretend they sold 3.2 million paperbacks and 200K hardbacks. At $14.95 and $24.95 respectively, times a 25% discount most people probably got on amazon and stuff, that's
$4.96 $39.6 million dollars.
So no, they don't give a flying donut hole in hell whether James Frey lived it, made it up, or pulled it out of his ass. They're running with it -- or, as they actually said:
The power of the overall reading experience is such that the book remains a deeply inspiring and redemptive story for millions of readers.
You bet it does -- emphasis on the "millions"!
Does it really matter whether James Frey lived the harrowing life he described in his "non-fiction" book? Does it really matter whether JT Leroy is a 21-year-old diamond in the shit? Isn't the poetry of their work justification enough? Does it really have to be
true that that, well,
really true way?
Yes -- partly because of those phantom WMDs. The US, the UK, and several other suckers went to war largely over those WMDs, spent billions of dollars, killed tens of thousands of people and injured hundreds of thousands, and left Iraq "mildly radioactive" (as the overly serious Christian Parenti put it at last night's
reading at the Make Out Room) -- all because it depends on the definition of what "is" is.
There
were WMDs in Iraq... or there were not. James Frey
did do time and fall in love with a fellow junkie whom he tragically could not save... or he did not. JT Leroy really exists... or s/he doesn't. Scooter Libby did break the law by leaking Valerie Plame's name... or he didn't say anything.
You know, at some point, words must mean something. Not just sound pretty. Not just paint a realistic picture. Words that are labelled non-fiction must be
not fiction, they must be
fact.
Or would you rather words mean anything, anything at all?
James Frey, A Million Little Pieces, Doubleday, WMDs