It’s funny — Peter originally read my review of his poem at the Car Crash Collective / Richard Hell reading and thought I was a hater. Before meeting him, I mixed him up with right-wing billionaire Peter Thiel. We’ve obviously put all this behind us. This interview is months in the making. We’ve had to work around the premiere of his film, www.rachelormont.com, and his audition tapes for the zealots.
Where’d the Jesus beard go?
Peter Vack — The Evangelicals googled me. I was their top choice until they found themasterofcum and Assholes.
Oh shit. Condolences.
It’s for the better. I might’ve gotten some hate for being associated with a company that advertises at the RNC.
The question of separating the art from the artist. Everyone’s been asking how much of Sillyboy is autobiographical. Does that get annoying?
It’s not annoying because it’s so expected. Now more than ever, people feel like they have to draw a connection between an author and protagonist. So I get it. The book even deals with that.
At one point you’re like, “Fiction is fiction.” But how many Jewish actor / writer / meme pages do I know?
A lot of this book is absolutely based on stuff from my life, but I don’t exactly love the mantle of autofiction. You spend so much time making something work as a story, so you do have to invent things. There’s too much emphasis placed on asking how a work relates to the life of an author.
That’s the mania right now — probably because of social media. We’re all given agency as creators. Even if you’re not a creative person, the template of social media is like, “Here, share your life with me.” It’s giving you this conduit for creation.
Anyone can be interesting.
Exactly. And that spurs that whole “main character syndrome” thing.
And now people are reading this as your biography. It probably doesn’t help that we’re friends. That may legitimize the book too much.
But if that’s people’s enjoyment of the book — to think that it’s all about me, then fine.
It is kind of scandalous to think we’re just reading your diary.
And if people want to love or hate that fact, that’s cool. Chloe, the girlfriend character, was originally based on someone I knew. But in writing anything, you imbue it with so much. So now, I feel like she’s taken on some characteristics of myself. When you’re writing a character, some of you leeches onto them.
I call it “semi-autofiction” because it’s certainly drawing from my life, but I’m also inventing things. People will think what they want. At the end of the day, it’s not up to me. They’ll hate or love this book with their own criteria. So be it.
All writing is, in some way, semi-autofiction. Because when you write, how do you not imbue yourself into the story?
I totally agree. People want to use artworks as a key to someone’s life. But it’s never that simple. It’s interesting, but it sometimes feels besides the point.