Love or hate, writing romance is all about emotions.
I’ve judged hundreds of contest entries, read thousands of
books and reviewed a few dozen. And gotten to the point where I’ll stop reading
if the story lacks a certain pizzazz. I’ve
noticed the same mistakes by beginning authors. The emotion doesn’t jump off
the page and grab the reader.
For example: I love you- Okay, sweet. How about: I adore
you- sounds a little more exciting. Or I hate you can be I despise you, I
detest you – lots more feeling there.
I’ve learned you need to go over the top to hook your
reader.
Check that word in your thesaurus. I bet there a bunch of
other, better words to use.
That’s a problem, too. You start with the excited tingle;
increase it to shiver, shake, and shudder and then what –
To sustain the over the top emotions can be exhausting for
the reader as well as the hero and heroine. We need to shake them up. Drop them
into an abyss of despair. Cut off all that love and give ‘em a jolt. Switch the
emotion to the other side of the spectrum. Give her a gulp of guilt to sour the
sweet love feelings or a dose of bitter regret.
Oh so many wonderful emotions to pick from. Don’t be boring.
Sure a romance is about the triumph of love, but there won’t
be much of a celebration if he quietly woos her, she decides to share her life
and they live happily ever after, with two babies and a white picket fence.
Throw in the biggest monkey wrench you can devise. If their
love survives a catastrophe, death, horrid mistakes in judgment or the evil
actions of that villain, then the story is a winner.
Good luck with those rewrites!
Check out my website for excerpts from my books and a
whole bunch of other stuff, like some juicy reviews, and my blog
www.barbaraedwards.net
14 comments:
Good advice! I once had a story stalled, so I threw my hero off the roof. Got my heroine's attention.
You should see my thesaurus. Literally falling apart. The right words are so key to creating atmosphere.
Hey Margo,
You got me hooked! Then what? Which book?
Hi Jannine,
I used my to tatters, too. I love, adore, etc. words. It's like picking tidbits from a smorgasbord.
Great post, Barbara. Love the part about shaking things up. Not sure who first said it but, get your MC up a tree then throw rocks at her/him.
Yes, excellent post. If your characters are too happy, your story is boring! Make them work for that HEA. I love that you threw your hero off a roof, Margo. LOL. Way to shake things up!
Barb - I'm in Rewrite Hell right now, and your blog just gave me a kick start - thank you!
Hi Diane,
Rocks, arrows, sticks and stones: anything to get them moving.
Hi Alicia,
Over the top is always better than in a rut. Margo has great ideas and plots.
Hi Glenys,
Glad to be of help. I had to write it on a sticky and put it on my computer screen to remember to keep it exciting. Good luck with the rewrites
Barbara, since you asked the book is my latest, yet to be published Stolen Trust. I'll keep you posted. No pun intended! I too have a dog eared Thesaurus.
You said it, Barbara! I read too many "romances" where the characters move through the scenes like drones. Terrific advice.
Hi Leah,
I noticed your work has a lot of punch!
Hi Margo,
I'll be looking for it. Thesaurus? Only an author would name her dog after a collection of words. Love it.
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