»King George III«

(Redirected from »(Autofictional Novel)«)

Olaf Langmack:

In 2014 I had made two experiences that generally are considered life-changing. Inspired by these, I set out to decipher my story. In February 2015, I captured its almost lifelong version through a series of typical episodes. (…) However, I couldn't find a way to decipher them convincingly.[1] I concluded that instead of an autobiography, I would have to write an autofictional novel, even without any experience or training. The fictional element became an impossible machine, which could read and print thoughts. This trick in 2020 [2] eventually brought a truely life-changing self-realization and a conclusion of this project.

Production archive Edit

Outline:

# from until Motive Pages Format Maturity
2014 July
2014 September
Trigger
2014 December Sketch 1 square Sample page
1 2015 February 2015 April Image story 57 " Print template
2 – 6 2015 Juni 2015 Oktober Image novella with graphics and photographs
non-linear narrating [3]
62 – 69 Portrait Print templates
7 2015 November 2016 February Fine work towards a review 119 " Sample copy
(Hardcover)
2016 February Review [1]
8 2016 June 2017 June Traditional narrating with text and images
Narrative model of the psyche
Separation of internal and external narrative
External: 157
Internal: 50
"
9 – 10 2018 August 2018 October Rough drafts "
2020 September Blind spot [2]
11 First draft 2020 May 2020 December Pseudonymous second author
external: rough draft
internal: complete draft [3]
External: 228
Internal: –
" Print template
12 Second draft 2021 August 2022 May Complete internal narrative 350 " "
13 Final draft 2023 March 2023 July Without second author
Separated internal narrative [3]
Historical context
Novel: 265
Brochure: 59
" Sample copy
(Hardcover)

In July 2025 he met up with two friends who had returned from a two years bicyle trip through Asia. Together they opened a fortune cookie, he had kept from their previous meeting, just before they started their journey:
 
He:

»I wholeheartedly disagree. Its only about getting lost.«

Notes Edit

  1. Jump up to: a b The review resulted in irreconcilable creative differences between mentor and author. As response he published an image novella on the topic of memory, the novel's core theme.
  2. Jump up to: a b Complete and detailed description of his ›Blind Spot‹ within a single day – five and a half years after the start of project
  3. Jump up to: a b c Japanese rhetoric