tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5058126041919303655.post1986485376859345059..comments2023-05-07T10:10:10.772-04:00Comments on An Author's Journey: Some Damned Tough Questions Part IS.M. Carrièrehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08568011755497760300noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5058126041919303655.post-84033086740539171242009-09-03T10:43:32.734-04:002009-09-03T10:43:32.734-04:00I particularly like your last comment... "Wri...I particularly like your last comment... "Writing is, after all, a kind of dysfunctional therapy, which perversely can turn a profit...."<br />Very truly spoken!<br /><br />I must say though, that none of this came to my attention until I had finished the series and started going through the questions here. As I was writing, I had no explanation for anything.<br /><br />If asked: "S.M. Carrièrehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08568011755497760300noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5058126041919303655.post-62354047739389420322009-09-03T10:30:00.843-04:002009-09-03T10:30:00.843-04:00What a curious question 7 is. So much so that it&#...What a curious question 7 is. So much so that it's repeated in the next question.<br /><br />There patently isn't any truth in a fictional premise. Otherwise it'd be an auto-biography. If we are limited to things we've experienced or believe in, then there cannot be any real fiction, just a world full of well written diaries.<br /><br />It simply doesn't matter, as long as a Tomhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06053091499833473580noreply@blogger.com