Coming up with a good trivia question is difficult if you're not 1000% knowledgeable.
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Here's a (relatively) hard one for anyone to chime in:
Which character makes the following quote: "YES! Oh, yes! In your face ! And the pimp goes down!"
Name:
1) Which character made the quote
2) To whom was the quote spoken, and
3) The circumstances in which the quote was made.
Correct answer to all three will earn you a REP from the Lit-Meister... !
I don't think any one took a stab at this one... Datu answered this in, I believe in part three of the first chapter:
Fourteen, but the floor 'count' goes to fifteen because there is no thirteenth floor.
I'll bite.
My memory is telling me:
1) Lizzy
2) To Saul
3) The bet over Lizzy's idea about smart zombies setting the ambush they found on the way to get a fuel truck. They opened the car door and it stunk like zombie.
Snap
Almost had posted Burt. had to go back in to correct it.
This is a Fact: Victor was married, wife was like Frodo, he sold insurance.
This is a Story: "Back when I was little, I used to enjoy watching Looney Toons while eating bacon. My older brother, Willie, would tease me, saying that if I kept eating so much bacon that I would someday make noises like a pig. Sometimes he would hold me down and draw cartoon characters on me with a marker. I would cry so hard that when our mother would come into the room my sobs made me stutter. Willie really got a kick out of making me talk like Porky Pig. One day I took a permanent marker and drew all over his face. Boy, did he really loose it." - Duncan Roberts
This is the definition of backstory
Noun
- A history or background created for a fictional character in a motion picture or television program.
- Similar background information about a real person or thing that promotes fuller understanding of it.
Both of your examples fall into the definition of the word.
Further, your example of story is anecdotal narrative. Is that what you were looking for when you asked the question, or are you just being frustrated by the confusion that it has caused? Anecdotal narrative relates events of the character's past, while backstory tends to provide information that has formative value to the character in question. Why he's afraid of the dark or why he can't go into small spaces. How his father used to beat him, and even though he screamed and cried for her to help, his mother would just close the kitchen door and turn up the radio, which is why he doesn't give a shit that he's dying of lung cancer and is refusing to see him. Also why he doesn't blame his mother; she was going through the same abuse with him.
However, why is he so good at reading people? He was an insurance salesman! You say that it's fact, I say it's backstory. You say his brother drawing on his face is backstory, I say it's a past event and therefore, fact.
If we're going to split hairs . . .