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Dennis Meredith
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Question: jprofanity in dialog
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Dennis
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Oct 11, 2018 11:20AM

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There's more profanity in my novels than I would like, but I can't take them out because that is exactly what those specific characters would say. Do what feels natural for them.

There is a prior question that has to be asked here, by all concerned. Do you want realism, or are you looking for Never-never land so you can join Peter Pan and Wendy?
Answer that and the profanity question is easily answered.



Having a gritty drama with a captured criminal saying, Excuse me, officer, sorry to interrupt, would you mind loosening the handcuffs, they are chaffing a little' would be ridiculous.

Happily, there has been no book in any of the review groups I have joined (over nearly ten years) that served up such a book.

That was a comment about my use of profanity. I take it as compliment. In reality I did a word search for common swear words and researched things to replace them with.
Oddly enough nobody mentioned my "dumb blonde" showed her true character by using Shakepherian swear words when under stress.



But that would be funny.
Seriously, If it's in character, it's okay, overuse isn't offensive, it just boring
I had a friend, a religious friend, reading a book one time where the evil villain said to the heroine he had captured, “You gosh darn wench.” Despite my friend being religious, she had to put the book down, because such language was not realistic from such a character. On the opposite end, I also know that even if it’s realistic in real life, constant swearing is grating to a lot of readers and tends to look dirtier on paper than it sounds to the ears, though most readers tolerate a well placed curse word if it fits the character and situation. I don’t swear much in my books, but I have characters that swear plenty. There’s one scene in one of my books where one character slashes a knife across the face of another, cutting into part of his lip, much of his cheek, and into one of his eyes, and destroying it. You can bet that if such a situation happened in real life, the injured person would not be saying, “Golly,” or “Oh dear, that hurt.” He did swear, pretty loudly. What I wrote was, “A curse, taut with fury and pain, burbled from the man’s lips.” So the character stayed in character, swore all he wanted, but I didn’t have to write it down. Most of my books are middle grade and have no swearing at all, but in my books for older readers, like the one I mentioned, when there is a character who curses, I just mention that he/she curses, but don’t write the word/s down. That keeps the character realistic, preserves my personal standards, and avoids offending the sensibilities of my readers who are mostly conservative.

Here in Australia we have lots of alternatives to vulgarity. Exclamations such as "Bickering Bandicoots!" or "Snoring Snakes!" or even the old favourite "Pompous Possums!"
Not that I can recall anyone actually saying anything like that, but we're talking fiction anyway. Who needs credibility?