truth is stranger than fiction
English
Alternative forms
- fact is stranger than fiction
Etymology
Attributed to Lord Byron.[1][2]
Proverb
truth is stranger than fiction
- Sometimes actual events are stranger than imagined ones.
- 1989, B. A. Ramsbottom, Stranger Than Fiction: The Life of William Kiffin, Gospel Standard Publications, →ISBN, page 7:
- It has often been said that truth is stranger than fiction. But what writer of the most extravagant fiction could have thought up such a life as that of William Kiffin? A poor orphan becoming one of the wealthiest merchants in the country; […]
- 2003, Nicholas Rescher, Imagining Irreality: A Study of Unreal Possibilities, Open Court Publishing, →ISBN, page 239:
- In the end, truth is stranger than fiction: reality has more complications, more unanticipable twists and turns than fiction could ever imagine.
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Translations
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See also
- life imitates art
References
- Gary Martin (1997–), “Truth is stranger than fiction”, in The Phrase Finder.
- Lord Byron (1824), “Canto the Fourteenth, stanza CI”, in Don Juan (in English): “'T is strange—but true; for truth is always strange; / Stranger than fiction; if it could be told, / How much would novels gain by the exchange!”