L.Brown, Hemingways worst book, Green Hills (and he is my favourite author) is about Africa (but it is not fictional), Capstick undoubtedly borrowed stories from others, and if you watch any of his videos he admits the same !! How this has ANYTHING to do with pretending to have done military service somewhere baffles me ??!! best, Mike
Mike, pretending is . . . well, pretending. I agree that claiming military service (or war service you didn't perform) is a different order of magnitude, but it's the same principle. Some guy writes a book telling how he struck out Mickey Mantle several times back when the Mick was in the Minors, I want it to be the guy who did it--regardless of how good a wordsmith he is or isn't--not some guy who saw it happen and is claiming he's the one who did it. If I want good fiction writing, I have no trouble finding it. I don't much care for "creative" nonfiction. I'll take a lower standard of wordsmithing along with a higher standard of truth-telling.
And just like Capstick was a fine writer, Dr. Larry Cable was one heck of a lecturer on unconventional warfare. He fooled a lot of people in the military, including a lot of Vietnam vets, for quite some time. There's certainly a higher "fraud" standard there because of the "stolen valor" thing, but same principle. What it comes down to are a couple guys who were very entertaining, but didn't do what they claimed to have done. Seems I recall a newspaper reporter or two having maybe a Pulitzer yanked for stories they made up. Good writing, but if the award is for reporting and not fiction writing, then you don't get the award unless the story is true.