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Q&A

Should I use different fonts in my manuscript?

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My novel contains emails, titles of news articles, parts of technical journals, and snippets of computer output in addition to regular dialogue and action.

Is it common/acceptable to use one font for computer output and emails, another for news articles, and something else for regular dialogue and action? I consistently use the same font for each throughout the story.

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This post was sourced from https://writers.stackexchange.com/q/21610. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

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2 answers

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I think what I've seen most commonly used is the same font throughout, but that anything which the characters read, such as from a computer, in print, or on signs, and I think even excerpts from audiovisual media, is italicised and has wider left and right margins

Less commonly a different font, such as one mimicking handwriting or the actual font of the text, might be used. It can help to build character. I recall some novels making use of a dot-matrix style script when those printers were in common use, or a mish-mash of different fonts to mimic the cut from newspapers ransom note.

Either option can potentially work well. The first keeps the onus purely on the reader's imagination, the second provides more of an illustration.

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I'd say yes if you're careful about it and don't overdo it. Different formatting can be useful in quickly alerting the reader that the text is from an article or an email, particularly if it begins a chapter. I wouldn't make it a third of the book, but used judiciously, sure.

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