The Art of Fiction

2000

Overview

In 1958, by popular demand, Ayn Rand gave an informal course on the art of fiction to a group of friends and acquaintances in her own living room.

As editor Tore Boeckmann notes in his preface, Rand “prepared for each of her lectures on fiction only by making some brief notes on a sheet or two of paper. . . . Given the extemporaneous nature of Ayn Rand’s lectures, the transcript of the tape recordings had to be edited before publication. My editing was aimed at giving the material the economy, smoothness, and precision proper to written prose; it consisted primarily of cutting, reorganizing, and line editing.”

These edited transcripts of her lectures contain a vast range of insights that will appeal to both fiction writers and readers.

Themes

Literature, Rand says, “is an art form which uses language as its tool — and language is an objectiveinstrument.” In The Art of Fiction, Rand looks at how to use language with precision.

If you want to communicate as a writer, then you must use “words with absolute clarity.” The motto of every writer, she says, should be to “regard language as a tool of honor, always to be used as if one were under oath — an oath of allegiance to reality.”

Rand offers advice on how to develop this ability, such as this: “With the exception of proper names, every word is an abstraction. One way to have words come to you easily — words which express the exact shade of meaning you want — is to know clearly the concretes that belong under your abstractions.”

Extras

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