Miniskirt Democracy
Roxanne Varzi
- Soft Weapons: Autobiography in Transit by Gillian Whitlock
Chicago, 216 pp, £10.50, February 2008, ISBN 978 0 226 89526 0
In school we were asked to write a short story: fiction, not autobiography. I began mine with the sentence: ‘Bombs dropped, the sky was ablaze, there was no night.’ The teacher, who had been making her rounds, looking down at our papers as she went, saw mine and sniffed: ‘Fiction does not have to be “real”, but it does have to be truthful. A writer writes what she knows.’ Embarrassed, I told her that I had lived through the Revolution in Iran. She apologised: Iran trumped everything, and she could neither prove nor disprove my statement. The truth was that the bombing I had experienced had presented itself only as loud thuds and clouds of smoke. Years later, when I saw a bomb turn a car to a rusted skeleton, I wasn’t able to write about it – because I literally couldn’t believe my eyes.
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[*] John Murray, 288 pp., £6.99, May, 978 0 7195 6252 5.
Vol. 30 No. 15 · 31 July 2008 » Roxanne Varzi » Miniskirt Democracy (print version)
Pages 25-26 | 2916 words