How to Plan, Write, and Develop a Book: Writing about People You Know: Do You Need to Get Permission?

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A reader from Connecticut is finishing up her new novel this month, getting ready to send it out to agents.  She sent me a good question that often plagues writers right before their work goes out into the world.

“I believe it was Barbara Kingsolver who said she sends her finished manuscripts to family for final approval,” this writer wrote.  “If there’s anything there that offends them she takes it out.  Since there are a few true intimate details in my novel that helped develop my fictionalized characters who were originally based on real people, I’m wondering if you have any thoughts on that.”
Any writer who bases fictional characters on real people (as most of us do, to some extent) or writes about real places and eras runs the risk of offending readers by inaccuracy or similarity.  A common joke among novelists is friends and family scouring their books to see where they appear.

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