In some sense all family stories have a Rashomon quality. Ms. Myerson is candid about her son’s behavior and her own painful abandonment by her father when she was 16. But she barely mentions a year of marital strife that her son identifies as the time he started using drugs regularly. Asked why, Ms. Myerson responded the same way she did to her son: “This can only ever be my story from my perspective, and all I can say is I’ve been as truthful as I’m capable of being.”
4 comments:
Fascinating questions. This reminded me of something I read earlier today. A.S. Byatt's criticism of writers who use real people in their work:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2009/aug/13/byatt-novelists-real-life-characters
Not saying I agree. I just think it's interesting.
This looks fascinating-- I'll squirrel it away for later today. Thanks for passing it on!
I don't understand how I didn't know you had a blog of your own! Probably because I'm a giant flaming narcissist!! I'm so happy to get to read up on you...reading up.
Hi Lia! So glad to see you here!
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