Yes it is because it tells the reader a background of your life and people get interested in reading about someones life.
depends on the application and your personal experience level.
Katherine Paterson was inspired to write "Bridge to Terabithia" by the real-life experience of her son's friendship with a girl who tragically died. This personal tragedy led her to explore themes of friendship, loss, and imagination in the novel.
Personal narratives are not non-fiction because a narrative is fiction. Also, it depends on how you write your personal narrative.
William Sleator wrote "Unbalanced" in 1997. It is a science fiction novel that explores themes of cloning and identity.
Just write about your experience in the fall break, your English teacher cannot penalize you for your personal experience.
That was her personal choice but you may ask her on her web site laurenmyracle.com
If you are calling it fiction, no. You can write anything as fiction with a narrator who uses "I" and describes actions and events as if he or she were really there. They can be completely made up. If the narrative is billed as a memoir or as nonfiction, yes, it has to be true.
Though based on her life, most of the story was fiction.I liked to read non-fiction more than fiction stories.To write fiction, you must make up a story that sounds believable.
You can not write a novel by keeping your creative juices in your head. Also, you can not write a novel by writing a dictionary instead.
The same types as in any other country. We write all sorts of fiction -- anything you can imagine, there's an American novel in that category!
Fan fiction is a way to expand on a story you like, using characters that have already been established by another creator. You can make up what happens after the end page of a novel, or after the credits start rolling at the end of a movie. You can write whatever you want, and other people have the chance to read it if you post it on a fan fiction website.
What's wrong with that? Anyone can write a Novel!