Accuracy - or Compromise?

"You can't please everyone."

I've heard this phrase a lot since I started writing. Usually when there's divided opinion over something I've written. And I do get that. To try to produce something that everyone will love is unrealistic.

But yesterday, this phrase was on my mind. Why? Because of something I'd written in a WIP. It caused a debate among my beta readers, and it got me thinking about my goals. Do I strive for accuracy? Or do I compromise because such accuracy might cause confusion or offence?

I'm in the middle of writing Threepeat, the next book in the BDSM series Secrets, with Parker Williams. This will be the third novel, and as the title suggests, it's a ménage. So what caused the debate?

One word: douche.

When I originally wrote the chapter in question, I used the word 'enema', but changed it after one of my betas (who is A-British, and B- gay) suggested it was too clinical a term, and that British gay men used 'douche' more often. I had no problem with that. Anal douches are sold on Amazon in the UK, and that's how they are referred to.
Then the debate started.

Another beta pointed out that 'douche' in the US was used to refer to feminine hygiene, and they didn't want its use in the book to confuse readers, to in some way feminise the character, who has suffered at the hands of his family for not being 'man enough'.
What struck me most was the first point. Would US readers be confused? Offended?

I sought the opinion of an American gay friend, who assured me that American gay men used the term douching if they were being direct, and 'washing out' if they were being a little more delicate. He felt that enemas were more a colonic or therapeutic process in his mind.
Then he made a remark that stopped me. "But if the majority of your audience are women..."

Then what do I do? Use a word that gay men would use - or change/ remove it, because not doing so might offend the sensibilities of some readers? Accuracy - or Compromise?

Another beta didn't feel there would be any confusion, that readers had met the term before, and that the process didn't reflect on the character. Several betas felt that accuracy was the way to go - and there was that phrase: "Because you can never please everyone."

So often, I see a review where a reader complains that what they had just read didn't reflect reality. And yet on other occasions, when an author has provided that reality, they have been met with negativity.

See? We can't win. There really is no pleasing everyone.

Where do you stand on this?

To illustrate my point, the scene I was describing was a submissive's first experience of this procedure. Later, after he's had another first - anal sex - the following conversation takes place:

Tim chuckled. “If you must know, I was just remembering the noises I made in the bathroom earlier. I’m surprised you and Sam stayed.”
Aaron tugged him closer, and Tim slid into his warm embrace. “If you think a little farting is going to have us running for the hills, you’re wrong.” He chuckled against Tim’s ear, and it tickled. “And far be it from me to disillusion you, but you haven’t experienced sex until you’ve had to deal with lube farts.”

Now, my British gay beta's reaction to that?
"Love the lube farts .... very very true."
How the readers might react is another matter.

So I ask again - Where do you stand on this? Do you want reality - or not?
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Published on January 08, 2018 06:18
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message 1: by Nell (new)

Nell Iris I prefer reality. We all know that there are no happily-ever-after-forevers, that the romances we love to read and write are nothing but a fairy-tales, but if the details are accurate it helps me buy into it.

For example: me and the hubby watched a sci-fi movie where aliens invaded earth, but when the hero took off on a motorcycle he reacted negatively. “That bike doesn’t sound like that. This movie isn't realistic.” Meaning, he was okay with the aliens, the space-ships, and unlikely heroes, but when they got the real-world details wrong, the ones he knew something about, he objected.

It's all in the details. So, I vote for reality. And yay for lube farts ;-)


message 2: by K.C. (new)

K.C. Wells There is also the idea that maybe some readers feel lube farts are a step too far. LOL That there is such a thing as too much realism.


message 3: by Kathy (new)

Kathy Griffith I love reality :) I mean, we don't need graphic reality, but a peek into some of the "less glowing" things you need to think about when anal sex happens. In my latest, I had one guy ask the other "What did you have for breakfast this morning?" being glad he just ate toast, and of course, later on, the guy said "NOW I know why you asked that."
and as for the other, I would use the term "anal douche" because everyone knows what that does :)


message 4: by Meags (new)

Meags I love this discussion. I’m all for reality/accuracy, even if it’s confronting.


message 5: by Sylvie (new)

Sylvie I'm for reality too. It's the best of both worlds, when I can be transported by a wonderful story and learn something at the same time!


message 6: by Jessica (new)

Jessica I prefer the real, too often romance skips or ignores the fine details of real. And yeah we don't need line by line detail to make it real but romance based firmly in the real is for me easier to fall into. I can pull from experience and find aspects I can relate to even though the larger scope M/M I can't put myself into that exact head space.

So whatever the real is for the world you have built be in it today contemporary or a Sci fi world you have built. If you make the story feel real by including those sometimes less than fun aspects it seems more grounded. I can't say how many times I have heard friends and fellow readers mention the extremely simple aspects that have become ridiculous in romance writing, M/F sex scenes were both parties just cuddle up and go right to sleep directly after sex, the pristine condom after anal sex, etc. Sex is messy but it's real.


message 7: by Diana (new)

Diana Another vote for reality here, plus (as a reader who reads widely from both US and UK authors) it's fun to learn expressions from another dialect. I use British expressions all the time; they're more interesting than the ones at home.


message 8: by Monchari (new)

Monchari S I prefer reality too.
I think "words" will always be interpreted differently by every person's experiences, let alone lives the same country, anyway.
It always good to learn new word with new meaning and new definition.
Reality will help reader like me, who are not using English as a mother language, to learn and see more.
Well, and reality is real.


message 9: by suzanne (new)

suzanne Total reality always. The scene has to be "real"


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