Not exact matches
Real Steel is what happens when
people who know nothing
about science
fiction make a science
fiction movie...
The best thing
about the film, though, is that even though it's all
about real events and
real people, it still feels like a very well - written piece of
fiction — not to say it feels unrealistic, it's more to say that the characters are more developed and intriguing than in most biopics.
Someone even a short film
about a support group for
people who love «Carol» a little bit too much (the short is obviously
fiction, because in
real life of course it is not possible to love «Carol» too much).
I can't help but believe that there is truth behind the
fiction; I can't help but believe that the characters that I came to care
about were based on
real people.
The reader really feels for the
people she talks
about, she's excellent at capturing the moment and empathy, and in the stranger than
fiction tales she delivers the human and the
real.
For
fiction, Darlene Shortridge writes
real stories for
real people... In Forever Blessed, Ms. Shortridge carves a gripping and heartfelt tale
about spousal abuse with stark conflicts and turbulent emotions, while entwining the tale with the Lord's eye - opening truth!
For more specifics
about using
real people in your
fiction, check out this helpful article at Writer's Boon from Australian lawyer Carol Vorvain.
I didn't know it was historical
fiction, so that sent me to the Internet to read
about the
real people in the book.
If you work in non-
fiction or write memoirs (if you use celebrities and other
real people in your
fiction), you may have reason to be more concerned
about potential liability.
Too many
people throw out impossible conditions that «the other side» must meet, waste time with unclear and unhelpful commentary that neither stimulates thought nor furthers the search for knowledge, and act like they forget that this is
about actual,
real outcomes and not pie - in - the - sky Professor - from - Gilligan's Island
fictions.