Home    Workshops    Members Only    Contests    Join    Contact us                       RWA Chapter
Showing posts with label paranormal romances. Show all posts
Showing posts with label paranormal romances. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Keeping it Fresh by Alexis Morgan


All books, regardless of genre, require a certain amount of world building to give them depth and richness. The setting in your story should be more than just a backdrop for the action that takes place. Treat your world as another member of the cast of characters. Granted, it doesn’t walk or talk, but it does have a definitely personality.  If that wasn’t true, then it wouldn’t matter if you set your story in Memphis, Mars, or on the moon. 

Even in a straight contemporary or historical, with no other  worldly elements,  it is the author’s responsibility to create a sense of atmosphere that is true to the chosen time period or city. The Regency era is not the same as the Victorian; Seattle is not New York; and a space port definitely isn’t the same as a fantasy world filled with knights and castles.

People from different economic groups talk and act differently. Members of the military think differently than civilians. A new colony in space will face different challenges than one that is well established. A family in a small farming town will react differently to a crisis than someone who lives in a “vertical village,” as someone once described the large apartment building where she lived.

To complicate things even more, world building in a series presents its own set of problems. For any given book in the series, you have three kinds of readers: those who have never read any of the previous books, those who have read all of them, and those who reread all of them before the new one comes out. The tricky part is providing enough detail about the world to satisfy all three types of readers.

I tend to be on the “seat of the pants” end of the spectrum when it comes to writing. Often, it isn’t until someone asks me how I handle something like keeping my world building fresh that I actually step back and analyze how I do handle a particular element in my writing. A few years ago, I was part of a panel discussing the more general topic of how to create/write a series, when someone asked me how I world build in successive books in a series without boring my established readers to death.

After some thought, I realized there are several ways to address the issue of world building, whether for a stand alone book or one that is part of an ongoing series:

1. Look at the world you are creating through the point of view of someone who lives in the heart of it and has the most to lose.

For example, in my Paladin series, what made the heroes different was their ability to come back from death, but only so many times. I opened the book in the point of view of the oldest Paladin struggling back to life, learning to breathe again and hoping he’ll make it all the way back again. Watching over him is the heroine who loves him. She is also the doctor who will have to end his life if he doesn’t make it. Note that they are both insiders in the world in which they live. This drew the reader right to the center of the action from the opening paragraphs.

2. Another option is to have someone who is familiar with the world explaining it to an outsider, one who knows little or nothing about how their secret world functions.

We often see this in paranormal romances. The hero is part of a group that lives under the radar of the human population. He can be a vampire, a shifter, a demon, or an angel. The heroine somehow stumbles across his truth; he saves her from an attack or maybe she saves him. Either way, he is reluctantly forced to reveal the truth of his world to her. I especially like to use this method when something about that world needs to change, but everyone who is already part of it can’t see there are options other than how they’ve always ways done things. Sometimes it takes a newcomer to put important changes into motion. 

3. Another method that works well is to have someone who has a completely different take on the world explain things. 

His view isn’t wrong, simply different.  For example if you’ve created an alien world that the humans are starting to colonize, let the readers see the impact that is having on the planet through the eyes of a member of the native species. Are humans with their technology welcome or does their arrival herald the destruction of the established culture? Do the natives fight back or accept the loss of their heritage?  

4. And finally, you can also explain the world to your readers through the eyes of the villain or antagonist.

 He/she is certainly going to see things differently than the hero and heroine. He could be a part of their same world. Perhaps he’s a vampire who doesn’t want to accept the new strictures about killing humans. He could be a werewolf who is secretly plotting to overthrow the current alpha, because the pack needs to adapt to a changing situation. Or back to that new human colony: maybe the humans have worked out an agreement to peacefully coexist with the native population, but that means leaving a large part of the planet undeveloped and unexplored. The antagonist sees that as unfair restriction on his ability to mine the rich deposits of a mineral that is badly needed on his home planet. He’s not exactly a villain, but he definitely has a different outlook on how his world should function.

I hope this gives you a new set of tools to use when you’re creating the setting for your book and/or series. My advice: pick the person with the most at stake and let him reveal his world to your readers.    
 
Alexis Morgan Bio:
lexis has always loved reading and now spends her days imagining worlds filled with strong alpha heroes and gutsy heroines. She is the author of over thirty books, novellas, and short stories. Her books include contemporary romances, American West Historicals, Paranormal Romances, and most recently, fantasy romance. Alexis has been nominated for numerous industry awards, including the RITA© from the Romance Writers of America, the top award in the romance genre.
Social Media Links:
Twitter: @Alexis_Morgan
 

Thursday, August 9, 2012

The Making of a Sexy Were Beast by Terry Spear

When creating a world that’s out of this world, we need to set it up so that readers feel they are part of that environment. That even if it’s totally unreal, they can visualize it.

So how do we do this? If it’s a totally new world, we have to describe it well enough that readers will feel they exist in the same realm.
I wrote a futuristic otherworld existence for one story—based on the premise that book stores are important. Someone had asked for short stories using the idea, but this was way before ebook technology. I wrote the story, was promptly rejected—didn’t want romance and was told that this was by invitation only—so why it was on the Web for everyone to submit to, I haven’t any idea. I loved the characters and the premise of the story and turned it into a novel. I’m still revising.
Can you have a dragon brother and a panther sister?

In my current works, I try to make them as realistic as possible. My werewolves are based on real wolves. They live in packs or as lone wolves using real wolf dynamics. Yet they aren’t real wolves. They’re humans who shift into wolves. So they have the human aspect also. They aren’t strictly humans either as they have their own wolfish personalities. They are one with their two halves and the two halves make them whole.
There are exceptions to every rule. So though the norm is one way—wolves mate for life—there are exceptions. Some wolves do take another mate if theirs dies. One male had two female wolves for his mates. Because there are exceptions in the real world, I use that to make exceptions in my world.

For the wolf tales, I’ve used some true wolf stories, research houses that I think will be perfect for the homes they live in, the perfect kitchen, the perfect den, the perfect ocean view, lake, island, etc. I learn the kind of plants, woods, terrain that are in the area. Researching weather can help to make the story more realistic, and makes it easier if you’re trying to set up a situation that turns out not to be viable because the weather wouldn’t cooperate. I make up towns sometimes when I want to instead of using an existing one.
In the new jaguar series, I started the first of the stories in the Amazon jungle. That’s where the big cats are. So I wanted the jungle feel to the story. Not humans running around purring and what not. I wanted to show they had real bite.
Setting can be really important to help create your world. Even though the stories focus on character as well as plot, I always have to think of how I can make the story as real as possible, and creating a scenario where jaguars are running around NYC would be hard to do—for my kind of cats. It doesn’t mean they don’t exist. But that I’d have to come up with a reasonable explanation of how they’d get around the city if they had the urge to shift.
Some authors have worlds where their were-creatures coexist with the human population. Instead of the secretiveness that my world requires, their worlds are more based on the prejudices of were-creatures trying to live with humans.
No matter what kind of world we create—vampires, psychics, ghosts, time-travel, were-creatures, we have to have conflict. Conflict is what makes the story riveting to read.
So back to my earlier futuristic world. I have were-animals in that “book-stores-are-important” story (who knows now, eh?)—the panther and a dragon shifter, sister and brother. How in the world did I come up with that? I don’t know. I just liked the idea. The story is full of adventure, world-building, mystery, fighting, loving, you know, all that good stuff. But essential to the story is character and plot and world-building.
We can do anything we set our minds to do if we have a good enough reason for it. Any world that we set up can work if we know why we’re doing it that way. If we know the backstory, how they existed before this, what motivates them, what their goals are and why, we can make it work.
Creating the characters that fit with the otherworldly part of them, creating the world that does too, it has to seem real, no matter how far out it is.
The Rainforest
In my wolf stories, which were first? Red werewolves or gray? The debate goes on.
In my jaguar-shifter story, how did the shifters’ family become jaguar shifters? How far back in the family tree? How do jaguar-shifters come to be?
I haven’t answered all these questions. Sometimes leaving some of the mystery in the story gives you the opportunity to create scenarios in new books that you wouldn’t be able to if you’d already locked yourself into the world.
Except when you make exceptions. There are always exceptions. You just have to come up with a plausible enough reason why.
The key to making any kind of a world that isn’t of the norm, or even when it is, is to make YOUR story unique. What editors will ask you is—what else is on the market like this? Is your story unique enough? BE the trendsetter.
I was reading a book by one author who talked about a character who is a were-rat. Okay. My former manager wants me to write about a were-sea otter. We can do anything we set our minds to do if we have proper motivation. Just remember your potential audience. Will you have enough readers who are interested in a sexy were-rat of a man?
Hey, zombie romance exists now!
The key to success is to make your world unique, set some standards and stick by them, unless there’s an exception, and create a world your readers can believe in. Make characters that your readers will love, enough conflict to keep them reading, goals and motivation to make the story plausible, and the world is yours to create.
If your poor witch, or zombie, or were-creature isn’t interesting agents and editors, come join me in a workshop on Rejection! Rejection! Rejection! And how to deal with it.
The wolves….
A SEAL IN WOLF’S CLOTHING, March 6, 2012

Her instincts tell her he's dangerous...
While her overprotective brother's away, Meara Greymere's planning to play—and it wouldn't hurt to find herself a mate in the process. The last thing she needs is one of his SEAL buddies spoiling her fun, even if the guy is the hottest one she's ever seen...

His powers of persuasion are impossible to resist...
Finn Emerson is a battle-hardened Navy SEAL and alpha wolf. He's a little overqualified for baby-sitting, but feisty Meara is attracting trouble like a magnet...

The jaguars….
SAVAGE HUNGER, October 1, 2012

Kathleen McKnight is on a dangerous mission to help her army team take down a drug lord. She's a tough as nails recruit, but when she's caught in the crossfire, she has to rely on a mysterious man to save her. She has no idea that he has big plans for her...

Connor Anderson is a jaguar shifter who is looking for his mate. When he rescues Kathleen in the jungle-twice—he can't help but be intrigued. Will a bite or a scratch turn Kathleen into the perfect jaguar mate?
I hope you will join my class
How to Deal with Rejection
&
Do What You Love Most-Write!
Hosted by
Fantasy-Futuristic & Paranormal
Romance Writers
This 2 WEEK class starts September 10th
For more information click HERE 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR, Terry Spear

USA Today bestselling author, Terry Spear has written over three dozen paranormal romance novels and two medieval Highland historical romances. An award-winning author, Terry’s Heart of the Wolf  was named a Publishers Weekly’s Best Book of the Year in 2008. A retired lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Army Reserves, Terry Spear spends every spare moment writing paranormal romance as well as historical and true life stories for both teen and adult audiences. Spear lives in Crawford, Texas, where she is working on her second book in the jaguar shifter series! For more information, please visit:






Thursday, July 5, 2012

Five Tips for Writing Paranormals by Rebecca Zanetti

Happy July, everyone!  I wasn't able to find somebody to post today at FF&P, so guest what?  Yep.  You get me.  :) 

I think the key to writing a good paranormal is to make the world somehow normal for your reader.  Through the last year, I've come up with five tips for writing a paranormal romance:

1)      Remember even if your hero is a six foot genius vampire with huge pecs and perfectly rugged features who single-handedly has saved humanity three times…he has to have a flaw somewhere.  And no…being too kind, endowed, or brilliant don’t count.  My favorites are when the character has to fight his own flaw, usually in the nick of time to beat the bad guy.
2)      Remember that your reader probably isn’t a six foot genius vampire…nor is she dating one.  So it’s crucial to find a way for your reader to relate to the characters.  I have two sisters and a strong family life, and so my vampires deal with family life daily.  The Dark Protector Series is about five brothers and how they not only find love but work together to save their race.

3)      Remember that whatever exciting, complex, deep world you build in Book 1…you’re stuck with for the rest of the series.  Leave yourself some wiggle room.  Also, you don’t have to build your entire world in book one.  You just need enough of your world for that book to make sense.

4)      Remember that there are tons of paranormal books out there—make your world different.  Put your unique spin on it.  I’m a lawyer and things have to make a sort of logical sense to me.  So I had to figure out HOW a male vampire (who in my world is very much alive) could make his mate immortal—turns out genetics and the mutation of chromosomes made sense.  It was a different spin, at least enough of one that my editor was intrigued.
5)      Finally, don’t hold yourself back.  As writers, we often stop and think about how the next editor/reader/reviewer/our first grade teacher/our neighbor…etc.  will react to our secret little worlds.  Don’t worry about them.  Let yourself go and have some fun with creating.
BIO:  Rebecca Zanetti is the author of the sexy Dark Protector Series from Kensington.  The fourth book in the series, CONSUMED, released on July 5th.  To find Rebecca on the web or to read an excerpt, drop by her website:  http://rebeccazanetti.com/