literature

5 Guidelines for Adding Romance to Your Novel

Deviation Actions

Daily Deviation

Daily Deviation

March 10, 2015
Romance should be simple.  JosephBlakeParker explains that in 5 Guidelines for Adding Romance to Your Novel
Featured by inknalcohol
DesdemonaDeBlake's avatar
Published:
8.3K Views

Badge Awards

Literature Text








PLEASE NOTE THAT WHILE THIS PAGE WILL REMAIN ACTIVE FOR PURPOSES OF EDUCATION AND RECORDS, IT IS OUTDATED. CLICK HERE TO ACCESS THE NEWEST VERSION.







5 Guidelines for Adding Romance to Your Novel – A Valentine's Day Special


Most people love to see romance in a novel of any genre. It's a universal human experience that can happen in the context of any story. However, most attempts at such have become cliched, sexist, or too unrealistic to be believable. So here are my 5 guidelines to adding romance in your novel.


Tip 1: Lose the damsel in distress trope.

It's the “romantic” trope of most movies and books, but it has become one of the worst cliches around. On top of being overdone (making your story less interesting should you employ it), the damsel trope makes the reader subconsciously respect the damsel much less, and therefore care little about the love story. Instead, make both partners, in your romance, at a similar level of competence for a truly interesting romantic dynamic.


Tip 2: Don't over-romanticize.

Do you know what happens when people run around, sword-fighting or dodging bullets? Sweaty pits and nasty body-odor. And when they sleep together and wake up in the morning? Morning breath. And the thing about this is that everybody who has experienced real romance know this. And while the overly-romanticized encounter may be fun for younger people, the rest of us know and cannot truly respect the story when it ignores realism completely. Romance is thrilling enough in its reality that you should never need to over-romanticize it. Your story couple should have fights, disappointments, failings on both sides, times when the leads don't have anything suave to say, cellulite, sometimes hairy legs, and the need to shower—so that it can resonate as true with the reader. Also through a true portrayal of romance, you are eliciting art to prepare readers for real romantic relationships, as opposed to creating erotica that merely sets them up for disappointment when their real-life partners cannot live up to overly-romanticized expectations.


Tip 3: Leave the payoff till the end of the story.

Love, like your adventure, is a quest that takes time and effort. And just like saving the world would feel cheap if it came easy and early in the story, so will love. And with nothing left to hope for, expect, or fight for, your reader will put the book down. So leave the romantic climax until the end of the story.


Tip 4: Don't lose sight of the plot in the light of romance.

While it is believable in certain cases for your in-love characters to lose sight of their goal, as far as the plot goes, it is not alright for the writer to do so. Even at the highest level of romance, don't ever forget the plot. What does the hero want? What obstacle is stopping them from getting it? And how do they defeat their obstacle or how are they defeated by it? Don't ever let the story end just because the hero perceives that he or she has found something better.


Tip 5: Opposites attract.

While this is not a rule, per se, it does make it more fun for the readers when you have romantic interests who initially hate one another, or who poke fun of each other. For tips on this, watch the 1993 version of “Much Ado about Nothing.” And don't worry, this is probably the easiest and most fun of Shakespeare's plays, performed by brilliant actors. Just remember that it takes a great amount of skill and crafting to cause enemies to love each other—but it has a great payoff.


Feel free to comment with other suggested resources. Any questions about writing? Things you want me to discuss? Comment or send me a message and I will be glad to reply or feature my response in a later article.


Originally posted at www.facebook.com/JosephBlakePa…

And: josephblakeparker.wix.com/theb…


Comments68
Join the community to add your comment. Already a deviant? Log In
Nat-The-Black-Cat's avatar
By the way, is there any other tips on how to write a good romance story? Because I mostly write romance stories (I will work on other topics other than romance in the future).

And thanks for the tips.