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The characterization in Stranger than Fiction is based very closely on the psychology of real-life schizophrenic author Gwynne Garber. Like Dahl, Garber suffered from a paranoid style of schizophrenia. Like Dahl, Garber was a writer, and Garber also liked to give his non-schizophrenic mental patient characters a voice. Garber believed that the mind was divided into two parts: imagination and reality. He believed that Emile, his fictional character, represented a projection of his own fears onto his diagnosis, and that when Emile's interactions with the fictional Decie, who is considered to be the main character of his memoir, is removed from the context of his delusions, reality can be reconciled with the fantasy world. This is a pattern that the author fixed in his later work The Squeaker when it comes to the relationship between the narrator Louise and her “imaginary friend”, Violet.
The idea of a gateway to the other side occurred to him. He developed this into a story in which the protagonist, Gary, goes to the other side, and his best friend, Kim, moves in with him. In the other side Gary meets a group of alien beings. The story arc is centered around how the friendship develops into an intimate relationship.
Like his real-life mother and his sisters, Dahl's fictional siblings Imo and Pippa were also given the same name. While Imitation of Life could not give proper explanations as to how "Imo" and "Pippa" sound alike, author James J. Benetto has suggested that the "im" and "em" in both names could imply that Dahl simply wanted to create a curious name for his children. d2c66b5586