“Their press release, penned by Pyro, is a more entertaining fiction than plenty of novels published this year.”
“It is important to check the facts because one eventually finds that most of these claims are fiction.”
“Much of it was so abstract in relation to fiction or poetry as to be nearly meaningless in a literature course.”
fictography
(literature) A fictionalizedbiography; a biography written about a fictionalcharacter. For example, Gulliver's Travels written by Jonathan Swift but presented as being written by Lemuel Gulliver, the novel's main character.
fictionalist
(philosophy) One who subscribes to fictionalism, the belief that certain concepts are simply convenient logical fictions
fictioneer
(dated) A writer of fiction, especially one who produces many publications.
“Not only an impressive fictioneer, he's also a technical journalist specialising in radio.”
“It won't have been his intention but following his memoir, Experience, The War confirms that his real strength lies not as a fictioneer but as an essayist.”
“This fictioneer pursued the latest writings on physicist and chemical research so that he might embroider his tales therewith.”