I'm needing some advice about same sex parent characters and using their pronouns along with proper names in dialogue.
I thought I had this down, but it is starting to get confusing. I have been writing (for awhile) a dystopian book where the main character was adopted by two married men. (I posted a sample in the Artist's Corner some time ago)
Well, I thought I had the pronouns set in stone. The main character, Blue, had a Father (Papa, Trevor) and a Dad (Daddy, William). She would call them my Dad or my Father. Like any kid, when you're talking to them you'd say something like "Daddy" or "Papa." Then I started to get worried that the readers wouldn't connect who each man was with their name.
It's especially hard since the first big scene has all three of them together and names are flying. I break them up later on and have her interact with the two men separately so that the audience can make an emotional connection. "Okay, Trevor is the father. He is a doctor." I didn't want to call them Papa Trevor and Daddy William. That's not something a child would do.
As readers, what would you need to keep things straight?
I thought I had this down, but it is starting to get confusing. I have been writing (for awhile) a dystopian book where the main character was adopted by two married men. (I posted a sample in the Artist's Corner some time ago)
Well, I thought I had the pronouns set in stone. The main character, Blue, had a Father (Papa, Trevor) and a Dad (Daddy, William). She would call them my Dad or my Father. Like any kid, when you're talking to them you'd say something like "Daddy" or "Papa." Then I started to get worried that the readers wouldn't connect who each man was with their name.
It's especially hard since the first big scene has all three of them together and names are flying. I break them up later on and have her interact with the two men separately so that the audience can make an emotional connection. "Okay, Trevor is the father. He is a doctor." I didn't want to call them Papa Trevor and Daddy William. That's not something a child would do.
As readers, what would you need to keep things straight?