By Kimberly Johnson
I’m so annoyed that I could curse. Should I use
curse words when developing dialogue when my main character and her momma fight
it out? I am developing a character profile, right now. The protagonist’s name
is Anjie and she has problems (baby daddy drama, trying to finish community
college, paying the rent on time, and a part-time mother who doesn’t want to
babysit). Anjie and her mother have a relaxed and tension-filled relationship
(I’m still trying to figure that out).
The angel that sits on my shoulder says: “Good
heavens, no. Using bad words shows a lack of education, you don’t have a
developed vocabulary”. The horned one chimes in: “#$!?* Yeah. What’s wrong with
a little spice? Plus who's gonna read that stuff if there ain’t no *&%%%
going on.” BTW, I like a good swear word every now then.
To help me with this conundrum, I sought out a
higher power—Writers’ Digest. I found a three question checklist that I liked:
- 1. Does it work for the reader?
- 2. Does it work for the character?
- 3. Does it erode my integrity as a writer?
After I punched out the angel and the horned one
(too many voices, too much noise), I put some meaningful thought into that
checklist, especially number 2. My preliminary writings show that Anjie is
still figuring out her upside-down, right-side up life. I think cussing out her
momma, every now and then, reflects the strain between grown-ups; not a walking- a- tightrope- mother-daughter
relationship. Hmmm. What do you think? Should I use curse words when Anjie and
her mother argue?
One of the best blogs bested in months.
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