It's easy to sidetrack me. Over the last few Christmases, I
have asked for the latest volume of BASS. I can't help but dive into the
introduction to see what the guest editor has to say about the state of the
short story, their opinion on literature in general, and of course, "the
times we live in…". The editor for The BASS 2025 is Celeste Ng. In her
introduction, Celeste does a fine job of detailing her story selection process
as well as listing a few details about each story. I decided to place this
little intermission into this project, interrupting the reading of the 1993
volume, because Celeste does a fine job of reminding us about the importance of
reading fiction (the importance of reading short stories will be in another
Intermission, which will feature interview excerpts with the previous BASS
series editor Heidi Pitlor).
Below you will find Celeste's thoughts about reading fiction as they were published in BASS 2025. The disinformation portion is quite important, but please pay attention to her thoughts on empathy and emotional truths. There's a lot of that missing in our time.
Reading fiction matters immensely, especially right now.
This is surely not news to you, but we're living in an era
of disinformation, in which knowingly false stories—or to put it more bluntly,
lies—are purposefully deployed to manipulate others, usually for the benefit of
a select few. 2024 is hardly the first year this has happened (and sadly, it
surely won't be the last), but this past year we've seen incredibly clearly the
real-world effects disinformation can have. I'm reluctant to repeat any of the
complete falsehoods that have spread on social media and in the real world
alike, often from people in positions of power, but I suspect I don't need to
give you examples. If you lived through this year, and the past few years, you
already know that the space between reality and fantasy has become increasingly
blurred in many people's minds-and to many, the distinction may not even feel
important anymore.
So why should we still read fiction in a time of lies? If
"alternative facts" are running rampant, isn't the antidote (real)
facts, rather than made-up stories? Aren't made-up stories part of how we got
into this mess?
Facts and verifiable data are immensely important-and I'm
deeply grateful to those who work to counter false claims with real
information. But I'd also argue that that's only one front in the battle.
Research shows, again and again, that a single personal story is more likely to
change a person's mind than any amount of statistics.
Obviously, this doesn't mean that when you read a story,
you'll suddenly find yourself in agreement with its characters or
author-stories are not magic spells, and I'm not saying that just reading short
stories will save the world, either. But stories build our empathy by asking us
to imagine what it's like to be in someone else's position, thinking their
thoughts and feeling their feelings. Unlike disinformation, a short story tells
you up front that it is fiction, and when you know it's all just pretend, you're
often more willing to play along: Okay, sure, I'll step into this world, it's
just fifteen or twenty pages, and it's all pretend anyway... It's like taking a
weekend trip to a place you've never been and aren't sure if you'll like, but
hey—it's only a weekend, right?
At the end, though—assuming the story's done its job-this
made-up story will have allowed you to access an emotional truth. Facts may tap
politely at the prefrontal cortex, appealing to your rational brain, but
fiction snakes its way into your limbic system and nests deep in your emotions.
By skirting all the rational barriers we hunker behind, sometimes fiction can
reach us in a more visceral way. And in doing so, short stories in particular
can act like little tuning forks, helping us to clarify our own values—then
allowing us to bring ourselves into alignment with what we believe. In a time
when our values are being tested daily, it's hard to think of anything more
important.

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