There’s an old adage, a suggestion for would-be authors that goes like this: write what you know. Because most writers are better at conveying ideas regarding subjects with which they are familiar, the process will produce more authentic results: realistic dialog, feasible plot lines, relatable characters. However, there can be a great deal of risk when it comes to writing from the heart. Baring one’s innermost secrets under an icing-thin “fiction veil” in personal memoir style could cause the type of problems nobody wants to have; legal. It can also makes one vulnerable to personal criticisms that can sting. Despite what’s stated above, a reader should never assume that a book sold as a work of fiction is anything more than face-value entertainment. After all, the familiar disclaimer, “This is a work of fiction. Any similarity to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events, is purely coincidental” was devised for good reason; to allow authors the freedom to express complex ideas about the social order without offending anyone, or in the case of Debby Buck DeJonge and her two novels set in the glammy world of fancy horse competitions: everyone. The author assured Grand Rapids Magazine that a chapter entitled “The Dirty Shame” in her new book set in the fictitious berg of Boutique Town bears no relation to a watering hole of the same name on the Ada outskirts. I’m a little skeptical, but I’ll let you be the judge…

Read the Article at Grand Rapids Magazine!

write what you know debby buck dejonge