I've noticed the confessional, consciousness-focused autofiction style to be uniquely useful in the context of speculative fiction, where its intimacy and perceived sincerity support suspension of disbelief. See Ishiguro's Never Let Me Go and Peter Watts' Blindsight.
This is great, thanks Shayne.
I've noticed the confessional, consciousness-focused autofiction style to be uniquely useful in the context of speculative fiction, where its intimacy and perceived sincerity support suspension of disbelief. See Ishiguro's Never Let Me Go and Peter Watts' Blindsight.
I'm serializing a piece of absurd autobiographical sci-fi about my divorce here on Substack: https://takimwilliams.substack.com/p/the-oddest-thing-about-the-folks