Description

Book Synopsis
Get your romance (writing) on! Writing a Romance Novel For Dummies is the only reference aspiring writers need to get their careers off to the right start. Fully updated to reflect the industry's latest trends and secrets, this book helps you understand what makes a great novel, so you can hone your craft and write books people want to read. We break down the romance subgenres, give you expert tips on plotting and pacing, and walk you through the process of finding an agent and getting published in today's competitive marketor self-publishing like many six-figure authors are doing. For aspiring writers longing to find success in the industry, Writing a Romance Novel For Dummies is easy to read, highly informative, and a must-have! Refine your writing to craft engaging stories readers can't put downFind a route to publication that works for youmainstream, or self-publishedUnderstand the ins and outs of the romance genre and its subgenresLearn how to get your work noticed in the popular world of romantic fiction This Dummies guide is perfect for beginning writers who want advice on writing and publishing a successful romance novel. It's also a great reference for accomplished writers looking to level up their romance game.

Table of Contents

Introduction 1

About This Book 2

Foolish Assumptions 2

Icons Used in This Book 3

Beyond the Book 3

Where to Go from Here 4

Part 1: Welcome to the World of Romance Writing 5

Chapter 1: Romance Writing at a Glance 7

Tuning in to the Market 8

Defining a romance 8

Subdividing romances into genres 9

Practicing Your Craft 10

Everything starts with characterization 11

It’s all about emotional tension 11

Plotting, pacing, and point of view 12

Choosing Indie Publishing or Traditional Publishing 13

Exploring the pros and cons of each 13

Choosing your path 13

Best Practices of Indie Publishing 14

Working with editors and graphic designers 14

Marketing and selling your book 15

Submitting Your Manuscript 15

Choosing the right publisher 15

Putting together a selling submission 15

Chapter 2: Romancing the Marketplace: Identifying Your Options 17

Knowing Your Reader 18

Meeting the romance reader 18

Meeting the romance reader’s expectations 19

Starting from Square One: Reading 20

Drawing up a reading list 20

Reading like a writer 21

Getting to Know Your Genre 22

Historical versus contemporary 22

Mainstream versus category 25

Subgenres and niche markets 28

Related women’s fiction markets 35

Choosing Your Subgenre 37

What do you like to read? 38

How do you fit into the market? 39

Chapter 3: Setting Up for Writing Success 43

Finding the Perfect Time to Write 44

Making time to pursue your dream 44

Creating your writing routine 46

Building a Writer’s Tool Kit 48

Sharpening up your office supplies: More than just pencils 49

Stocking the shelves: Your home library 49

Booking it: Accurate financial records 50

Accessing Resources for the Would-Be Writer 51

Joining writers’ organizations — romance-related and otherwise 51

Going where the writers are: Conferences and more 52

Taking advantage of courses and critique groups 52

Online resources 54

Part 2: Laying the Foundation: The Building Blocks of a Great Romance 57

Chapter 4: Creating Compelling Main Characters: Alpha Males and Fiery Females 59

Depending on Your Characters 60

The Key to Every Romance Is the Heroine 61

Drawing the reader into your story 61

Making your heroine feel real 61

Introducing imperfection 63

Naming your heroine 64

Creating Your Hero 66

Heroes are for loving 67

Holding out for a hero: Alphas and others 69

Looking for love in all the wrong places 74

Hello, my name is 74

Keepin’ It Real: Secondary Characters 76

Remembering their roles 76

Avoiding stereotypes 77

Speaking up 77

Naming the baby (and everyone else) 78

Factoring in the future 78

Laying Concrete Strategies for Creating Characters 78

Chapter 5: Crucial Ingredients for Every Plot: Conflict, Climax, and Resolution 81

You Can’t Have a Novel without a Plot 82

Where do ideas come from? 82

Letting your characters drive the plot 85

Suspense: Every Story Has It 86

Using romance to create suspense 87

Other ways of creating twists and turns 88

Making Sense Matters 89

Creating Emotional Conflict and Tension 91

Emotional versus intellectual conflict 91

Internal versus external conflict 95

Personal versus situational conflict 95

Handling Conflict Effectively 96

Keeping them together 96

Letting conflict complicate your plot 97

Taking two steps forward and one step back 98

Using sexual tension to deepen conflict 100

Dreaming of love 101

Saving “I love you” for the right moment 102

And They Lived Happily Ever After 103

Making your reader believe 104

Dark moment: Where all is lost 105

Climax: Timing is everything 105

Resolution: Endings made easy 106

Epilogue 107

Chapter 6: Setting the Scene 109

Deciding Where Your Story Takes Place 110

Following the lead of your characters and plot 110

Joining the real world or living in your imagination 112

Keeping your setting in check 113

Telling Time 114

Using Your Setting to the Fullest 115

Illuminating your characters 115

Making your setting a character 119

Chapter 7: Outlining versus Discovery Writing 121

Identifying What Kind of Writer You Are 121

Outlining methods 122

Discovery writing methods 123

Outlining: Mapping Out Your Story 124

What can an outline do for you? 124

What belongs in an outline? 125

Using your outline effectively 126

Listening to your creativity 127

Discovery Writing: Letting Your Story Unfold 127

Letting the characters guide you 128

Plotting as you go 129

Getting stuck in the rewriting trap 132

Part 3: Putting Pen to Paper 133

Chapter 8: Finding Your Own Voice 135

Speaking Up for Yourself 135

Revealing where readers hear your voice 136

Making the language your own 138

Choosing your words wisely 139

Mixing what you say with what your characters know 140

Putting the Show in Show and Tell 141

Knowing what you need to say, and then saying it 141

Speaking metaphorically 142

Describing your characters 143

Making every word count 143

Talking too much 143

Telling It Like It Is 144

Keeping your writing clear 144

Moving right along 145

Chapter 9: Letting Your Characters Speak 149

Giving Your Characters Voices 150

Making every character unique (and real) 150

Giving every character a consistent voice 153

Meeting the secondary-character challenge 153

Writing Great Dialogue 154

Using dialect and accents effectively 155

Keepin’ it cool: A word about slang 156

Using dialogue to convey information naturally 157

Putting dialogue on paper 158

Choosing and Using Point of View 160

What are they thinking? 160

Knowing whose voice to use 162

Internal monologues and how to use them 165

Chapter 10: Pacing: The Secrets of Writing a Page-Turning Romance 169

Pacing Doesn’t Mean Racing 170

Pacing and Plotting: Two Halves of a Whole 170

Knowing what readers care about 171

It’s not only what happens, it’s when and where 174

Knowing what to tell and what to leave out 177

Avoiding the Dreaded Sagging Middle 178

Recognizing a sagging middle 178

Stopping the sag before it starts 179

Dealing with it 180

Show It, Don’t (Always) Tell It 181

Harnessing the power of dialogue 181

Telling it like it is: Using narrative effectively 183

Finding the balance between showing and telling 185

Prose That Goes and Prose That Slows 186

Chapter 11: Taking It All Off: Writing Love Scenes 189

Comparing Sex and Romance 189

Knowing Where and When 190

Creating sexual tension 190

Deciding when the time’s right 192

Using love scenes to increase the tension 193

Using love scenes to support your pacing 195

Writing the Scene 196

Knowing your market 196

It’s not what they do, it’s how you describe it 197

Part 4: Putting It All Together: Mechanics Count, Too 201

Chapter 12: Starting and Stopping 203

Mastering the Winning Beginning 203

How to hook your reader 204

How to bore your reader 206

The cute meet: Necessary or not? 207

Putting Theory into Practice 209

Finding your starting point 209

Backtracking to the background 211

Opening lines that work 214

Constructing Can’t-Miss Chapters 216

Viewing every chapter as a new beginning 217

Leave ’em wanting more: Effective chapter endings 218

Keeping transitions fresh 221

Moving from Scene to Scene 222

Stringing scenes together 222

Seeing scene endings as mini-chapter endings 223

Intercutting scenes 223

Chapter 13: Getting Your Story Straight: Doing Research 225

Getting It Right: Priority Number One 226

Making Research Work for You 226

Figuring out what you need to know 227

Avoiding information overload 229

Getting Down to Business 230

Timing is everything 231

Organizing like a pro 231

Finding the Facts 233

Surfing the Net: Great information (and misinformation) 233

Supporting your local library and bookstore 235

Developing a nose for news 237

Taking time to stop, look, and listen 238

Traveling for fun and profit 238

Talking to experts 239

Getting Permissions 240

Determining when permission is necessary 240

Filling out the paperwork 242

Chapter 14: Neatness Counts — and So Does Grammar 243

Knowing the Importance of Good Writing 244

Finding good references 244

Using grammar and spell-check programs 245

Taking a course 246

Asking a friend 246

Making a Point with Punctuation 246

Comma placement 246

Using ellipses and em dashes 247

Talking about Dialogue and Narrative 249

Making Thoughtful and Relevant Word Choices 250

Don’t choose a fancy word when a simple one will do 250

Don’t use incorrect synonyms 251

Watch for repeated words 251

Formatting for Success 252

Setting your margins 253

Using the right fonts and spacing 253

Breaking your story into paragraphs 253

Avoiding common formatting mistakes 254

Formatting with indie publishing in mind 255

Checking Your Work One Last Time 256

Part 5: Traditional Or Indie Publishing — Which Is Best for You? 257

Chapter 15: Choosing Your Publishing Path 259

Weighing Your Options 260

Knowing the pros and cons of how you publish 260

Changing course 261

Staying on top of a quickly changing landscape 262

Comparing and Contrasting the Paths 263

Traditional publishing 263

Indie publishing 269

Becoming a Hybrid Author: The Best of Both Worlds 271

Chapter 16: Finding Success in Indie Publishing 273

Defining Your Success 274

Creating a Professional Product 275

Judging a book by its cover 275

Writing a tagline (it’s all in the hook) 277

Writing blurbs 278

Building your website 279

Creating Your Launch Team 279

Sending out ARCs 280

Finding helpful services 280

Forming Your Launch Plan 281

Networking 283

Boosting your sales 284

Building Momentum 285

Building a newsletter 285

Giving away a reader magnet 287

Purchasing an ISBN 288

Registering your copyright 289

Obtaining a Library of Congress Control Number 290

After You Publish 291

Doing market research 291

Paying for ads 291

Understanding the power of free 292

Chapter 17: Selling Your Manuscript: Traditional Publishing 295

Submitting Made Simple 296

Doing your research 296

Writing a successful query letter 297

Deciding Whether You Need an Agent 299

Understanding an agent’s job 299

Finding an agent 300

Sizing Up the Contract 303

Coming up with questions 303

Reading (and rereading) the fine print 306

Getting help 307

Strategies for a Win-Win Negotiation 307

Working with Your Editor 309

Making the relationship work 309

Revising your book one last time 310

Line editing set straight 310

Chapter 18: Handling Rejection 313

What the Rejection Letter Is Really Saying 313

Regarding rejections 314

Revising and resubmitting 315

Understanding the Revision Process 316

Addressing editor queries 316

Using an incremental approach 317

Being timely 318

When great minds don’t think alike 318

Handling the resubmission process 319

Identifying Common Issues 320

Your heroine isn’t as sympathetic as she needs to be 320

Your pacing is erratic 320

Your hero’s too strong/arrogant/tough 321

Your plot lacks the necessary complexity 321

Your characters’ motivations aren’t clear 322

Your characters seem more like types than real people 323

Maximizing Your Chance of Success 323

Keeping a positive attitude 323

Dealing with rejection, emotionally and professionally 324

Dealing with bad reviews 326

Part 6: The Part of Tens 329

Chapter 19: Ten Tropes Every Editor Knows — and Why They Still Work 331

Marriage of Convenience 332

Stranded with a Stranger 332

Runaway Bride 333

Secret Baby 333

Second-Chance Romance 333

Back from the Dead 334

Mistaken Identity 334

Woman in Jeopardy 334

The Dad Next Door 335

Even Sketchier Setups 335

Chapter 20: Ten Tips for Coming Up with a Successful Title 337

Speak the Reader’s Language 337

Know the Long and the Short of It 338

Try Single-Word Titles 338

Match Title and Tone Perfectly 339

Use Keywords 339

Consider Alliteration 340

Coin a Cliché 340

Name Names 340

Make Connections 340

Follow in Others’ Footsteps 341

Chapter 21: Ten Tips for Avoiding Common Writing Mistakes 343

Remember the Reader’s Expectations 343

Don’t Overwrite 344

Love It or Lose It 344

Let Your Characters Drive the Plot 344

Know That Effective Conflict Comes from Within 345

Make Sure You Have Enough Plot 345

Keep Your Story on Track 345

Keep Your Reader Interested 345

Don’t Forget the Details 346

Keep the Story Moving 346

Chapter 22: Ten Questions Every Romance Writer Needs to Ask Herself 347

Should I Write Romance Novels? 347

Why Can’t I Get Started? 348

What Can I Do When the Ideas Don’t Come? 348

How Can I Focus and Stay Positive When Things Go Wrong? 348

When Is It Research and When Is It a Waste of Time? 349

When Should I Publish or Submit My Manuscript? 349

Do I Need an Agent? 350

How Do I Handle a Friend’s Success? 350

When and How Do I Follow Up on My Book’s Status? 350

When Do I Let Go of a Book? 351

Chapter 23: Ten Ways to Beat Writer’s Block 353

Work Your Way Through It 353

Select a Different Scene 354

Look at the Last Scene You Wrote 354

Write a Scene That You Won’t Use 354

View the Scene from a Different Angle 355

Don’t Focus on Perfection 355

Stop in the Middle 355

Analyze Your Outline 355

Re-energize Your Creative Instincts 356

Start Another Project (If All Else Fails) 356

Index 357

Writing a Romance Novel For Dummies

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      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Get your romance (writing) on! Writing a Romance Novel For Dummies is the only reference aspiring writers need to get their careers off to the right start. Fully updated to reflect the industry's latest trends and secrets, this book helps you understand what makes a great novel, so you can hone your craft and write books people want to read. We break down the romance subgenres, give you expert tips on plotting and pacing, and walk you through the process of finding an agent and getting published in today's competitive marketor self-publishing like many six-figure authors are doing. For aspiring writers longing to find success in the industry, Writing a Romance Novel For Dummies is easy to read, highly informative, and a must-have! Refine your writing to craft engaging stories readers can't put downFind a route to publication that works for youmainstream, or self-publishedUnderstand the ins and outs of the romance genre and its subgenresLearn how to get your work noticed in the popular world of romantic fiction This Dummies guide is perfect for beginning writers who want advice on writing and publishing a successful romance novel. It's also a great reference for accomplished writers looking to level up their romance game.

      Table of Contents

      Introduction 1

      About This Book 2

      Foolish Assumptions 2

      Icons Used in This Book 3

      Beyond the Book 3

      Where to Go from Here 4

      Part 1: Welcome to the World of Romance Writing 5

      Chapter 1: Romance Writing at a Glance 7

      Tuning in to the Market 8

      Defining a romance 8

      Subdividing romances into genres 9

      Practicing Your Craft 10

      Everything starts with characterization 11

      It’s all about emotional tension 11

      Plotting, pacing, and point of view 12

      Choosing Indie Publishing or Traditional Publishing 13

      Exploring the pros and cons of each 13

      Choosing your path 13

      Best Practices of Indie Publishing 14

      Working with editors and graphic designers 14

      Marketing and selling your book 15

      Submitting Your Manuscript 15

      Choosing the right publisher 15

      Putting together a selling submission 15

      Chapter 2: Romancing the Marketplace: Identifying Your Options 17

      Knowing Your Reader 18

      Meeting the romance reader 18

      Meeting the romance reader’s expectations 19

      Starting from Square One: Reading 20

      Drawing up a reading list 20

      Reading like a writer 21

      Getting to Know Your Genre 22

      Historical versus contemporary 22

      Mainstream versus category 25

      Subgenres and niche markets 28

      Related women’s fiction markets 35

      Choosing Your Subgenre 37

      What do you like to read? 38

      How do you fit into the market? 39

      Chapter 3: Setting Up for Writing Success 43

      Finding the Perfect Time to Write 44

      Making time to pursue your dream 44

      Creating your writing routine 46

      Building a Writer’s Tool Kit 48

      Sharpening up your office supplies: More than just pencils 49

      Stocking the shelves: Your home library 49

      Booking it: Accurate financial records 50

      Accessing Resources for the Would-Be Writer 51

      Joining writers’ organizations — romance-related and otherwise 51

      Going where the writers are: Conferences and more 52

      Taking advantage of courses and critique groups 52

      Online resources 54

      Part 2: Laying the Foundation: The Building Blocks of a Great Romance 57

      Chapter 4: Creating Compelling Main Characters: Alpha Males and Fiery Females 59

      Depending on Your Characters 60

      The Key to Every Romance Is the Heroine 61

      Drawing the reader into your story 61

      Making your heroine feel real 61

      Introducing imperfection 63

      Naming your heroine 64

      Creating Your Hero 66

      Heroes are for loving 67

      Holding out for a hero: Alphas and others 69

      Looking for love in all the wrong places 74

      Hello, my name is 74

      Keepin’ It Real: Secondary Characters 76

      Remembering their roles 76

      Avoiding stereotypes 77

      Speaking up 77

      Naming the baby (and everyone else) 78

      Factoring in the future 78

      Laying Concrete Strategies for Creating Characters 78

      Chapter 5: Crucial Ingredients for Every Plot: Conflict, Climax, and Resolution 81

      You Can’t Have a Novel without a Plot 82

      Where do ideas come from? 82

      Letting your characters drive the plot 85

      Suspense: Every Story Has It 86

      Using romance to create suspense 87

      Other ways of creating twists and turns 88

      Making Sense Matters 89

      Creating Emotional Conflict and Tension 91

      Emotional versus intellectual conflict 91

      Internal versus external conflict 95

      Personal versus situational conflict 95

      Handling Conflict Effectively 96

      Keeping them together 96

      Letting conflict complicate your plot 97

      Taking two steps forward and one step back 98

      Using sexual tension to deepen conflict 100

      Dreaming of love 101

      Saving “I love you” for the right moment 102

      And They Lived Happily Ever After 103

      Making your reader believe 104

      Dark moment: Where all is lost 105

      Climax: Timing is everything 105

      Resolution: Endings made easy 106

      Epilogue 107

      Chapter 6: Setting the Scene 109

      Deciding Where Your Story Takes Place 110

      Following the lead of your characters and plot 110

      Joining the real world or living in your imagination 112

      Keeping your setting in check 113

      Telling Time 114

      Using Your Setting to the Fullest 115

      Illuminating your characters 115

      Making your setting a character 119

      Chapter 7: Outlining versus Discovery Writing 121

      Identifying What Kind of Writer You Are 121

      Outlining methods 122

      Discovery writing methods 123

      Outlining: Mapping Out Your Story 124

      What can an outline do for you? 124

      What belongs in an outline? 125

      Using your outline effectively 126

      Listening to your creativity 127

      Discovery Writing: Letting Your Story Unfold 127

      Letting the characters guide you 128

      Plotting as you go 129

      Getting stuck in the rewriting trap 132

      Part 3: Putting Pen to Paper 133

      Chapter 8: Finding Your Own Voice 135

      Speaking Up for Yourself 135

      Revealing where readers hear your voice 136

      Making the language your own 138

      Choosing your words wisely 139

      Mixing what you say with what your characters know 140

      Putting the Show in Show and Tell 141

      Knowing what you need to say, and then saying it 141

      Speaking metaphorically 142

      Describing your characters 143

      Making every word count 143

      Talking too much 143

      Telling It Like It Is 144

      Keeping your writing clear 144

      Moving right along 145

      Chapter 9: Letting Your Characters Speak 149

      Giving Your Characters Voices 150

      Making every character unique (and real) 150

      Giving every character a consistent voice 153

      Meeting the secondary-character challenge 153

      Writing Great Dialogue 154

      Using dialect and accents effectively 155

      Keepin’ it cool: A word about slang 156

      Using dialogue to convey information naturally 157

      Putting dialogue on paper 158

      Choosing and Using Point of View 160

      What are they thinking? 160

      Knowing whose voice to use 162

      Internal monologues and how to use them 165

      Chapter 10: Pacing: The Secrets of Writing a Page-Turning Romance 169

      Pacing Doesn’t Mean Racing 170

      Pacing and Plotting: Two Halves of a Whole 170

      Knowing what readers care about 171

      It’s not only what happens, it’s when and where 174

      Knowing what to tell and what to leave out 177

      Avoiding the Dreaded Sagging Middle 178

      Recognizing a sagging middle 178

      Stopping the sag before it starts 179

      Dealing with it 180

      Show It, Don’t (Always) Tell It 181

      Harnessing the power of dialogue 181

      Telling it like it is: Using narrative effectively 183

      Finding the balance between showing and telling 185

      Prose That Goes and Prose That Slows 186

      Chapter 11: Taking It All Off: Writing Love Scenes 189

      Comparing Sex and Romance 189

      Knowing Where and When 190

      Creating sexual tension 190

      Deciding when the time’s right 192

      Using love scenes to increase the tension 193

      Using love scenes to support your pacing 195

      Writing the Scene 196

      Knowing your market 196

      It’s not what they do, it’s how you describe it 197

      Part 4: Putting It All Together: Mechanics Count, Too 201

      Chapter 12: Starting and Stopping 203

      Mastering the Winning Beginning 203

      How to hook your reader 204

      How to bore your reader 206

      The cute meet: Necessary or not? 207

      Putting Theory into Practice 209

      Finding your starting point 209

      Backtracking to the background 211

      Opening lines that work 214

      Constructing Can’t-Miss Chapters 216

      Viewing every chapter as a new beginning 217

      Leave ’em wanting more: Effective chapter endings 218

      Keeping transitions fresh 221

      Moving from Scene to Scene 222

      Stringing scenes together 222

      Seeing scene endings as mini-chapter endings 223

      Intercutting scenes 223

      Chapter 13: Getting Your Story Straight: Doing Research 225

      Getting It Right: Priority Number One 226

      Making Research Work for You 226

      Figuring out what you need to know 227

      Avoiding information overload 229

      Getting Down to Business 230

      Timing is everything 231

      Organizing like a pro 231

      Finding the Facts 233

      Surfing the Net: Great information (and misinformation) 233

      Supporting your local library and bookstore 235

      Developing a nose for news 237

      Taking time to stop, look, and listen 238

      Traveling for fun and profit 238

      Talking to experts 239

      Getting Permissions 240

      Determining when permission is necessary 240

      Filling out the paperwork 242

      Chapter 14: Neatness Counts — and So Does Grammar 243

      Knowing the Importance of Good Writing 244

      Finding good references 244

      Using grammar and spell-check programs 245

      Taking a course 246

      Asking a friend 246

      Making a Point with Punctuation 246

      Comma placement 246

      Using ellipses and em dashes 247

      Talking about Dialogue and Narrative 249

      Making Thoughtful and Relevant Word Choices 250

      Don’t choose a fancy word when a simple one will do 250

      Don’t use incorrect synonyms 251

      Watch for repeated words 251

      Formatting for Success 252

      Setting your margins 253

      Using the right fonts and spacing 253

      Breaking your story into paragraphs 253

      Avoiding common formatting mistakes 254

      Formatting with indie publishing in mind 255

      Checking Your Work One Last Time 256

      Part 5: Traditional Or Indie Publishing — Which Is Best for You? 257

      Chapter 15: Choosing Your Publishing Path 259

      Weighing Your Options 260

      Knowing the pros and cons of how you publish 260

      Changing course 261

      Staying on top of a quickly changing landscape 262

      Comparing and Contrasting the Paths 263

      Traditional publishing 263

      Indie publishing 269

      Becoming a Hybrid Author: The Best of Both Worlds 271

      Chapter 16: Finding Success in Indie Publishing 273

      Defining Your Success 274

      Creating a Professional Product 275

      Judging a book by its cover 275

      Writing a tagline (it’s all in the hook) 277

      Writing blurbs 278

      Building your website 279

      Creating Your Launch Team 279

      Sending out ARCs 280

      Finding helpful services 280

      Forming Your Launch Plan 281

      Networking 283

      Boosting your sales 284

      Building Momentum 285

      Building a newsletter 285

      Giving away a reader magnet 287

      Purchasing an ISBN 288

      Registering your copyright 289

      Obtaining a Library of Congress Control Number 290

      After You Publish 291

      Doing market research 291

      Paying for ads 291

      Understanding the power of free 292

      Chapter 17: Selling Your Manuscript: Traditional Publishing 295

      Submitting Made Simple 296

      Doing your research 296

      Writing a successful query letter 297

      Deciding Whether You Need an Agent 299

      Understanding an agent’s job 299

      Finding an agent 300

      Sizing Up the Contract 303

      Coming up with questions 303

      Reading (and rereading) the fine print 306

      Getting help 307

      Strategies for a Win-Win Negotiation 307

      Working with Your Editor 309

      Making the relationship work 309

      Revising your book one last time 310

      Line editing set straight 310

      Chapter 18: Handling Rejection 313

      What the Rejection Letter Is Really Saying 313

      Regarding rejections 314

      Revising and resubmitting 315

      Understanding the Revision Process 316

      Addressing editor queries 316

      Using an incremental approach 317

      Being timely 318

      When great minds don’t think alike 318

      Handling the resubmission process 319

      Identifying Common Issues 320

      Your heroine isn’t as sympathetic as she needs to be 320

      Your pacing is erratic 320

      Your hero’s too strong/arrogant/tough 321

      Your plot lacks the necessary complexity 321

      Your characters’ motivations aren’t clear 322

      Your characters seem more like types than real people 323

      Maximizing Your Chance of Success 323

      Keeping a positive attitude 323

      Dealing with rejection, emotionally and professionally 324

      Dealing with bad reviews 326

      Part 6: The Part of Tens 329

      Chapter 19: Ten Tropes Every Editor Knows — and Why They Still Work 331

      Marriage of Convenience 332

      Stranded with a Stranger 332

      Runaway Bride 333

      Secret Baby 333

      Second-Chance Romance 333

      Back from the Dead 334

      Mistaken Identity 334

      Woman in Jeopardy 334

      The Dad Next Door 335

      Even Sketchier Setups 335

      Chapter 20: Ten Tips for Coming Up with a Successful Title 337

      Speak the Reader’s Language 337

      Know the Long and the Short of It 338

      Try Single-Word Titles 338

      Match Title and Tone Perfectly 339

      Use Keywords 339

      Consider Alliteration 340

      Coin a Cliché 340

      Name Names 340

      Make Connections 340

      Follow in Others’ Footsteps 341

      Chapter 21: Ten Tips for Avoiding Common Writing Mistakes 343

      Remember the Reader’s Expectations 343

      Don’t Overwrite 344

      Love It or Lose It 344

      Let Your Characters Drive the Plot 344

      Know That Effective Conflict Comes from Within 345

      Make Sure You Have Enough Plot 345

      Keep Your Story on Track 345

      Keep Your Reader Interested 345

      Don’t Forget the Details 346

      Keep the Story Moving 346

      Chapter 22: Ten Questions Every Romance Writer Needs to Ask Herself 347

      Should I Write Romance Novels? 347

      Why Can’t I Get Started? 348

      What Can I Do When the Ideas Don’t Come? 348

      How Can I Focus and Stay Positive When Things Go Wrong? 348

      When Is It Research and When Is It a Waste of Time? 349

      When Should I Publish or Submit My Manuscript? 349

      Do I Need an Agent? 350

      How Do I Handle a Friend’s Success? 350

      When and How Do I Follow Up on My Book’s Status? 350

      When Do I Let Go of a Book? 351

      Chapter 23: Ten Ways to Beat Writer’s Block 353

      Work Your Way Through It 353

      Select a Different Scene 354

      Look at the Last Scene You Wrote 354

      Write a Scene That You Won’t Use 354

      View the Scene from a Different Angle 355

      Don’t Focus on Perfection 355

      Stop in the Middle 355

      Analyze Your Outline 355

      Re-energize Your Creative Instincts 356

      Start Another Project (If All Else Fails) 356

      Index 357

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