An adventure story lover turns to chick lit…

The Twirl and Swirl of Letters

Inside this hardened, speculative fiction and historical fiction loving soul there is a chick lit book waiting to escape. I have the scenario in my head. I have characters semi-developed. I even have a killer opening (no, not literally, but that would be pretty awesome, if an entirely different genre).

Thing is, I don’t read chick lit. By and large, I don’t even read romances (I read stories where there are romantic relationships, but they aren’t the focus). In the last year, the most chicky-typical book I read was PS I Love You (Alexander McCall Smith’s books don’t count). By and large, my reading selections are more along the spy story, black comedy or classic route than traditionally girl books.

I’m not familiar with the genre. I really don’t want to read too many of the books within the genre–by and large they don’t appeal to me. But I have a story in my head that I must tell. I’m sure it will be filed away with countless other tales to be told, fermenting and biding its time until one day when it attacks me, springing forth with teeth bared, wearing designer stilettos.

30 Days of Writing: Day 16

The Twirl and Swirl of Letters

Do you write romantic relationships? How do you do with those, and how “far” are you willing to go in your writing? ;)

Despite my dislike of reading romantic stories, I do write romantic relationships. Why? Because my characters have them. They’re dedicated spouses, nefarious playboys, naive youths. They may not all be romantically involved, but that’s life.

My romantic relationships are rarely intrinsic to the plot. My characters have relationships, their significant others may play a part in the plot, but rarely (if ever) does a story revolve solely around the romance. That would just bore me to write.

And I’m a definite ‘fade to black’ sort of person.