The Lifespan of a Fact is a battle of wills between a writer, D’ Agata, of a submitted essay in which he has admittedly taken “liberties… here and there, but none of them are harmful” and the magazine’s fact-checker, Fingal, a man obsessed with the accuracy of details in a work of nonfiction. What follows in this book is an engaging, humorous, and controversial philosophical fight that poses some difficult questions: How much flexibility and artistic license is acceptable in a work of nonfiction? Where is the line drawn? What is truth – factual versus artistic?
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