Maggie is writing a novel about a group of people living in a made-up place, based on a real location. She faced a dilemma this month about how much freedom she has, as a fiction writer, to use real places in her story.
"The reader knows my novel takes place in Minnesota," Maggie told me. "I want to reference lakes, counties and towns that one of the characters--a realtor--covers. These places are my real-world reference points."
My first novel was based in a real-life place--the Adirondack mountains of New York State--and included real towns. I made sure I visited those towns, used accurate information, but I also fictionalized parts and said so in my author's notes. I know many writers do this. But it is a good question to ask.