As I mentioned before, I have a few phrases of advice regarding creative writing that I repeat often enough to dub them maxims. This time, I want to look at the concept that real life has an advantage over fiction: fiction has to make sense.

This is hardly an original observation of mine, of course; Mark Twain wrote the first known version of this line (“Truth is stranger than fiction, but it is because Fiction is obliged to stick to possibilities; Truth isn’t”), though I’m rather more fond of G. K. Chesterton’s version (“Truth must of necessity be stranger than fiction […] For fiction is the creation of the human mind, and therefore is congenial to it”).

The principle here is that reality can be random, but fiction has to have structure. We strive to make fiction as realistic as we can, but the human mind tends to rebel at a story with too much chaos. Perhaps it’s as simple as a recognition that if humans build something, it should be built with purpose and design, and so something that feels too realistic in this way feels as though the writer was careless.

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