Warning: some early chapter spoilers in this post
In Through my Eyes. Again. the protagonist, Will, has been physically abused by his father since he was six years old. It is clear that whilst not approving of the violence, Will's mother is compliant for some complex of reasons. The story depicts only one more such abusive incident, when Will's father slaps him so hard he is thrown across the kitchen. Will's reaction to this causes his mother to move to stop the abuse, but Will's fear and distrust naturally remains and colours his actions into the future.
As is common for first novels, there are elements of autobiography in Will's story, but these are more seeds, starting places from which the story grew. My relationship with my father is one of those seeds and I have certainly had my own struggles arising from childhood stuff over the years as a result.
There is no tag for 'child abuse' at SOL and in writing my story I did not think about how that content might affect people who have been victims of child abuse - and it is clear that my story is stirring things up for some people. I was aware that the story elements involving suicide could well be problematic for some readers and so I explicitly warned about these.
But I did not think through what drove Will towards suicide and how that alone could be difficult for some people.
Authors inevitably deal with difficult subjects - to some extent, this is part of the remit of storytelling: to bring dark subjects into the light and to subject them to examination through the medium of a story. I certainly did not have this as an aim when I started writing, but now see I have blundered into this.
I hope that Will's story is helpful to those people who had had abusive childhoods and perhaps also to people now close to them.
If my story causes difficult thoughts, please seek professional help.
So - should I have warned about the child abuse? I don't know - perhaps the 'blurb' should have included a warning about this element. But one of the wondrous things about a story is that each person reading it reads a different version, coloured by their lives and their experiences which they bring to the words on the paper (or screen).
And that makes content warnings hard.