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Okay,
that's wonderful, sage advice from a lady who obviously knows what she's
talking about. But here's the crunch for most of us: how do we do it?
How do we find a true definition of those two dreaded words, emotional
punch, and put it in our work?
That's
what this workshop is for: to take existing plots and make them special,
so special your characters will flow from it, and be so real they'll
leap up yelling at an editor, "buy me!" I can't give you any
magic formulas; all I can do is pass on the details of my personal
journey on plot discovery, and find ways to make something sparkling
from basic plots.
It's said
there are 8 basic plots for a romance novel. As some of you know, with
help from the RWNZ email list, I got them down pat recently. They are:
*
Beauty and the Beast
* King and beggarmaid/ princess and pauper
* Reunion after painful past
* Secret Baby
* Cinderella
* Marriage of convenience
* Forced Marriage/blackmail
* Bad girl/Good boy and vice versa
Now we
all know the basic twist of combining two or more of these elements,
such as reunion/secret baby, or marriage of convenience/Cinderella.
Adding such things as 'woman in danger' usually stems from these basic
plots, and can be innovative and effective; but the plot twists I'm
talking about are different.
I'm going
to start with a working example. The last thing I want (or probably you)
is for me to bore you with the story of my books. But five minutes
should make the point, and we can move on together. Her
Galahad, which will be released by Silhouette Intimate Moments in
October 2002, combines a few basic plots:
*
Princess and pauper
* Reunion after painful past
* Secret Baby
* Forced Marriage/blackmail
* Good girl/Bad boy
Then I
took each theme and twisted them.
1.
Princess and pauper? How could I twist that? By turning it around.
They had been, in their painful past, princess and pauper, rich white
upper-class girl and Aboriginal carpenter. Now she's a poorly paid
teacher on the run from her obsessive, abusive, bigamous 'husband', and
he's a rich artist. He wants seven kids; she knows she can't have any
more. So she's on the back foot right from the start.
2. Now
the Secret baby plot? It sounds plain and straightforward, doesn't it?
So how to twist that? By making the baby so secret the heroine thinks
she died. And the hero hates the heroine because he thinks she
adopted their baby out. And he also has a baby, a son from another
relationship with a woman who died. There's always ways and means to
twist something new from a plot!
3. I
twisted the good girl/bad boy plot by giving the good girl martial arts
skills and turning on her family, willing to imprison them if she has
to, on a quest to find her child they adopted out and told her had died.
The bad boy becomes a good hero by being a bad boy not of his own
choice, but imprisoned for crimes he didn't commit—by the man the
heroine marries five weeks after the hero's arrest, and the heroine's
brother and father. And this bad boy's been declared dead twice—once
legally, with a death certificate to prove it. The heroine has a
matching certificate, dated three years before his. And if the cops find
him, he'll be imprisoned again just for being alive (by the way, this
came from truth: in my university course I discovered the Australian
government issued fake death certificates to Aboriginal kids taken from
their families to stop them finding their heritage and make them 'blend'
into white society. I thought, if they can do it, it can be done!)
4. The
forced marriage/blackmail plot? I twisted that by giving the hero and
heroine a secret marriage of one day, and the heroine, a forced marriage
to a man who blackmailed her into becoming an unwitting bigamist,
knowing she thought her true husband was dead.
From all
these unusual plot twists, I suddenly found a wealth of creative emotion
coming straight from the heart. I felt for this suffering hero and
heroine. I wanted them to have a happy ending because, hell, they
deserved it! I didn't just want to write the book by the time I'd
finished - I was compelled to. The characters were so real to me I
couldn't leave them hanging in the air. I finally understood why actors
talked about their character in a movie as if that person was real:
because, to them, they were. They had to be, or the movie won't work for
the actors or the theatre goers. That was what happened to me with Her
Galahad, and the way I continued with the Nighthawks
series. The basic plots with the twist in the tail!
Emma
Darcy says in her how-to book that empathising with a hero or heroine is
important—but it's not always just 'writing from the heart' that does
it. You can make a heroine cry, she says, but will it make the reader
cry? Not if they haven't gone on the journey with the heroine first,
to feel what she's feeling before she cries. It's true what Valerie
Parv says in her How-to book: You have to torture your characters! You
have to make them orphans, throw them in boiling oil, drop them out of
trees and throw them off cliffs, shoot them, stab them, and then, right
when it can't get worse—make it worse! Why? Empathy! Because
readers love to go on the journey. They want to feel what the
characters are feeling, to cheer them on, to find reasons for these
people to deserve their happy ending. Without this vital element, a book
loses its interest. If an author writes more than one book where I don't
feel for the characters I won't buy that author again. I'm afraid I'm
not loyal to authors: I read what entertains me.
How about
you? What is it you look for in a book? What drags you in? What books
are your all-time favourites? Do you know why you love those books?
Analyse it. Do you know the basic plot of that book you love? Now think
about the twists on these plots the author used to hook you in. These
points show exactly what I meant in the beginning: these authors have
twisted the basic, well-loved plot to make it extraordinary, stand-out,
unforgettable— the emotions have come right from the author's heart.
When you
have several plot twists it prevents the dreaded sagging middle if you
pace them out. You can't bombard the reader with too much information at
once, but to add another twist just as the story slows, or becomes close
to resolution—fabulous! Something to make the reader gasp, be they
judge, editor, agent or someone who picked it up in a bookshop. Isn't
that what you love in a book— something to keep that hero and heroine
apart just a little longer?
Get those
plot twists going. Get them spinning like juggler's balls in the air and
catch them, one by one! Or let them fall with a crash! Either way, your
story keeps going without a sagging middle, and should keep the reader
hooked.
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