Submitted by huphelmeyer t3_10oerh5 in books
The full disclaimer reads;
“This novel is entirely a work of fiction. The names, characters and incidents portrayed in it are the work of the author’s imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or localities is entirely coincidental.”
I see it even on historical fiction. For example, the main character of this book is Genghis Khan
So the disclaimer is simply a lie in this case. And let’s say you actually did write a more modern story based on a real living person. Would slapping this disclaimer on the first page offer any real legal protection?
serralinda73 t1_j6e687x wrote
It depends. If the real person can prove that you included private, secret, personal information that you should not be airing to the public and you are only "disguising" it under the umbrella as fiction, then you are breaching their rights to privacy, you may be slandering (libeling?) I forget which is which) them.
Usually, when fiction includes a real person and facts about their life, the author has to include sources, either as a general bibliography or also with footnotes. If you're just making stuff up and happen to get it right...that's accidental and not your problem, as long as you can show that you had no prior knowledge about the facts/truth.