It seems I have read more then one story which will involve a couple, either married, or simply in a relationship, in which they will be intimately involved with each other for a period of time, and yet there will be no mention of children. Because it is not part of the story, and not related to what the author wants to convey he will simply ignore the idea of childbirth all together without even offering an explanation for why there are no children, they are just written off completely.
And for the most part these are stories that were written in a time in which birth control was not exactly convenient or effective and so it would be highly improbable for a couple having regular relations to go without children.
While on the one hand I know it is fiction on the other hand, if an author is writing a realistic story, set in a real time and place, involving people that could very well be real, and in real life situations, can an author just choose which parts of reality to ignore if such is not convenient for him to address.
I know I am just nit-picking here and this issue will not make or break a story for me, and I can understand why it is easy to just skip over for the sake of the greater importance behind what the story is trying to convey. But there has just been more then one instance when I have been left wondering "Where all the children? And why has such not been mentioned or addressed at all?"



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Do you know about the birds and the bees, Lima? 

But you're right, it's up to the author. Not having children may be unlikely but it is not improbable.
