The coolness continues! Check out this brand new column I just wrote for the fantastic WriteSex site - where I'll be contributing a monthly piece. Here's a tease - for the rest you'll have to check out the great site.
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For
new writers, the temptation is obvious: after all, if you don’t know
something, shouldn’t you seek out a way to learn about it? The question
of how to educate yourself as a writer is a necessary and important one,
of course, but an often-invisible second question follows: how do you
sift through the piles of would-be writing coaches, teachers and other
purveyors of advice to find the ones who will lead you toward genuinely
better writing? The problem isn’t that there are over-eager teachers
galore, but that far too many of them are preaching from ignorance—or
just dully quoting what others have already said.
This is particularly true of erotic romance. Now, I have to
admit I’ve been more than a bit spoiled by other genres, where you can
write about whatever you want without much of a chance—beyond clumsy
writing—of getting rejected for not toeing the line, so approaching
erotic romance has been a bit more of a challenge. Romance authors,
after all, have been told time and time again that there is a very
precise, almost exacting, Way of Doing Things … and if you don’t, then
bye-bye book deal.
But times have changed, and while a few stubborn publishers
still want erotic romantic fiction that follows established formulas,
the quantum leap of digital publishing has totally shaken up
by-the-numbers approaches to romance writing. Without going too much
into it (maybe in another column…), because ebooks are so much easier to
produce, publishers can take wonderful risks on new authors and
concepts, meaning that they don’t have to wring their hands in fright
that the new title they greenlit will go bust and possibly take the
whole company with it.
Because of this freedom, erotic romance can be so much more
than it ever was: experimental, innovative, unique, challenging, etc.
These are no longer the Words of Death when it comes to putting together
a book.
One of the great, underlying tasks of teaching—one I love,
but with some reverence and an occasional pang of dread—is challenging
the boring, formulaic, way that so many talk about writing (which is
also to say that a huge part of the reason I love to teach is that it’s a
weird form of revenge against all the bad writing teachers I’ve had
over the years). There are, however, far too many writing teachers who
relentlessly parrot that erotic romance has to follow a strict formula
to be successful. They spell out this formula in stomach-cramping
detail: what has to happen to each and every character, in each and
every chapter, in each and every book.
[MORE]
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