Comment by Manuel_D

5 years ago

The presentation of the story is actually pretty subtle about it's fictional nature. Nowhere in body of the story does it say it's a work of fiction. Readers the miss the small "fiction" label in the header [1] could easily make the mistake of thinking it's a real story. And as per OP many did make this mistake.

1. https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2017/12/11/cat-person

I'm quite inclined to think that the movie that Cat Person is made into would display "based on a true story" rather than the South Park fiction disclaimer. Why? Revenue.

>Nowhere in body of the story does it say it's a work of fiction.

This is a bizarre demand to make of a work of fiction. How many fictional stories mention they are fiction in the body of the work?

  • "There are only the pursued, the pursuing, the busy and the tired", Nick thought, fictionally.