I am still falling back into the routine of life after our family trip to Ecuador in August. It was our first trip internationally with our children. I have yet to sit and write a blog post, let alone print or order photos! Choosing about 20 of 1700 photos (and that wasn't even enough!) is hard but I did my best (see above). Writing about the beauty that is Ecuador, even harder. I'll summarize our adventure (stay tuned for a more detailed blog post)...
Romancing the Summer away at RomantiConn - free ticket giveaway!
I know, it’s been awhile! But I’m here! :) I’ve been busy writing and revising and enjoying spring. My quick round-up:
Revisions, writing a new book
Enjoying early spring flowers and plenty of walking and biking
A huge landscaping project
Visited a local STEM event and geeked out, Star Wars style
Planting my veggie gardens and nurturing my seedlings indoors a little longer
Be sure to sign up for my newsletter for quarterly updates.
Do you love reading romance? Do you like meeting dozens (over 80!) authors, grabbing goodies, and snagging book deals?
Then RomantiConn (a fabulous Romance Reader & Author Event in Trumbull, Connecticut) is for you! I am lucky to be able to give away ONE free ticket admission to RomantiConn this year. I will be announcing the winner on JUNE 1st. You have all month to enter.
Enter for a free ticket admission
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Enter for a free ticket admission 〰️
Learn more about RomantiConn
And about tickets here
And it wouldn’t be a blog post from me without photos of nature, hikes, flowers, or coffee mugs, so here’s a spring round-up! Biking, walking, Star Wars at STEM event, daffodils at a botanical garden, some of my seedlings, and cupcakes for a recent bake sale.
Writing the In Between: Romantic Women's Fiction
What makes a book a romance?
Many people think having a romantic arc of any shape or size in a book categorizes it as a romance, but this is not the case. All genres can have a romantic arc in their book. Others presume that if you have two character POVs and they are or become romantically involved it is romance. Also, not always the case. So what is a romance then?
According to the Romance Writers of America (RWA), two basic elements comprise every romance novel: a central love story and an emotionally satisfying and optimistic ending.
However, a romance’s framework goes far deeper than that. There are “rules” or beats an author must follow, a template of sorts to achieve the status of romance. There are a slew of other conventions and elements readers expect to see in a romance. Often, but not always, the story is formulaic (much like a cozy mystery), and readers know what to expect. There are no surprises.
What makes a book women’s fiction?
According to the Women’s Fiction Writer’s Association (WFWA), women’s fiction is:
A layered story in which the plot is driven by the main character’s emotional journey.
An emotionally satisfying ending (Happily Ever After or HEA) is not a guarantee. Chick-lit, book club fiction, and literary fiction can all fall under the Women’s Fiction umbrella.
According to the Romantic Women’s Fiction Writers (a chapter of RWA), “Romantic women’s fiction is a happy marriage of romance and women’s fiction. On the heroine’s journey through life, she meets the hero, adding romance to her other challenges. In the end, many of her life’s issues are resolved and the romance has a hopeful, satisfying conclusion.”
Now that I got all those murky-hybrid-crossover definitions out of the way, what do I think is Romantic Women’s Fiction?
I believe romantic women’s fiction is any story about a protagonist who undergoes huge personal growth, which is deep and layered. The story may or may not have a HEA (in my case, mine do). The story revolves around a protagonist (usually a woman) overcoming both an internal (emotional) and external conflict, resulting in personal growth. The protagonist’s central emotional journey weighs heavier on the page than the romantic journey.
Authors who’ve successfully entered this realm of romantic women’s fiction include Susan Wiggs, Amy Harmon, Kristin Hannah (some of hers), Katherine Center, Nicholas Sparks, and Barbara O’Neal to name a few. Jeeves Reeds lists a few of these “crossover books” and Amazon even has a category of “Women’s Romance Fiction.”
What authors do you think fall into this realm of Romantic Women’s Fiction?
When an author plunges into the world of querying and marketing such a novel, we quickly find ourselves stuck in the murky world of: Is my book romance? Is it a subgenre of romance? Is it women’s fiction with romantic elements? What is my book?? Who will want this? Agents and readers may say, “Yuck! There’s not enough romance in this” or “Nope, this story has too much romance to be women’s fiction.” It’s the Goldilocks of fiction genres: too much or too little romance. What is the balance of just right? That answer, I do not have.
I am currently querying a book that falls into this mysterious in between. I’m also writing a book that has yet to be labeled with a very low-simmer and side-story romance, but it’s definitely not the central story.
My hope is this new label of romantic women’s fiction takes a strong hold of the writing, reading, and publishing community and becomes a genre we hear more about. I want to see lists on Amazon, Goodreads, and BookBub. I’d love to see hashtags like #romanticwomensfiction take off on Instagram, Twitter, and MSWL.
What do you consider Romantic Women’s Fiction?
I’d love to hear from you.
Until next time…
P.S.
Here’s a list of a just few (there are many of us out there!) up and coming authors who delve into the Romantic Women’s Fiction realm:
Julie Howard ~ Pamela M. Kelley ~ Ramsey Hootman ~ CJ Fosdick ~ Shirley Goldberg ~ Sarah Grunder Ruiz ~ Jennifer Bouchard ~ Paulette Stout ~ Jamie Beck ~ Kristan Higgins ~ Amy Q. Barker ~ Leslie Lynch ~ Rebecca Campbell ~ Lorrie Thomson ~
Holidaze!
Anyone else feeling the daze that comes with fall holidays, one after the other? Then top it off with #NanoWriMo2021 (or in my case, I opted for #NanoRebel) all November? Ahh…Well, time to cut to the chase.
It’s Giveaway time!
Woot! I do enjoy giving stuff away. This month I’m teaming up with ten other authors across genres (memoir, mystery, romance, women’s fiction, and fantasy) to giveaway a bunch of e-books! How to enter? Easy peasy:
Hop over here: bit.ly/21holidaygiveaway
What else have I been up to? Besides writing and researching and the usual marketing gauntlet, I’ve been working the craft and book fair circuit, meeting lots of local folks, and happily introducing new readers to my books, photo cards, and homemade jams! And yes, I did 2 events in one day because I have coffee running through these veins!
Be back in the new year!
Slainte.
Fun with Fall Festivals!
You’re either rolling your eyes or smiling at my alliteration, right?
’Tis the season of getting out and being a bit more social again. Or so I hope. 2020 translated to lots of canceled conferences, workshops, signings, and all things in-person for authors. 2021 started off the same, but as we transitioned into autumn and with shifts in state restrictions, I’ve noticed more opportunities popping up. I’ve been enjoying my October of not just the fall foliage (ahhhh) but other New England fall traditions: fests! Festivals are good excuse to get out and enjoy the fall colors, crisp air, pleasant temperatures, and blue skies. Our region is known for craft-vendor-bookish-fall-apple-BBQ-beer-cider-food truck events!
Apples from my own harvest. This is about 1/3 of my yield!