We have USA Today Bestselling author Melanie Milburne and there's a giveaway of kindle copy of HIS FINAL BARGAIN.
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Over to Melanie now...
HIS FINAL BARGAIN
A beautiful love affair and a burning betrayal...Eliza Lincoln is stunned to find Leo Valente at her door; four years ago his passionate embrace was a brief taste of freedom from her suffocating engagement. Until Leo discovered her secret...
Yet he hasn't come to rekindle their affair. He has a proposition he knows Eliza can't refuse: she's the only person who can help his small, motherless daughter. Torn, Eliza can't ignore a vulnerable child, but the last time she was near Leo her desire nearly consumed her. Is she willing to take that risk again now that the stakes are even higher?
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Over to Melanie now...
Six Tips for
Writing a Bestselling Romance Novel
I
think a lot of people assume romance novels are easy to write because there are
such a lot of them out there. It used to be just the bookshelves that were
spilling over with masses of titles in all the subgenres of romance, but now in
this digital age there is a proliferation of books just waiting to be read.
But
how do you make your novel stand out from the rest of the crowd? A catchy
title, a cute cover and a well-written blurb are all important, but there is
much more to writing a heart-warming and memorable story than that.
I
have six tips for making sure your romance novel is a standout.
1.
Make
it character driven.
Your novel is about
two people - the hero and the heroine. It is not about the heroine’s best
friend or the hero’s sister or brother or pet dog or cat. Complicated plots are
fine in a thriller or crime fiction or family saga, but in series romance they
can get in the way of a good story.
In His Final Bargain I will have to admit
the plot is a little more complex than some of my other stories, but it works
because the main focus is always on Leo and Eliza.
‘I
have another proposal for you,’ he said.
Eliza
swallowed tightly and hoped he hadn’t seen it. ‘Not marriage, I hope.’
He
laughed but it wasn’t a nice sound. ‘Not marriage, no,’ he said. ‘A business
proposal-a very lucrative one.’
Eliza
tried to read his expression. There was something in his dark brown eyes that
was slightly menacing. Her heart beat a little faster as fear climbed up her
spine with icy-cold fingertips. ‘I don’t want or need your money,’ she said
with a flash of stubborn pride.
His
top lip gave a sardonic curl. ‘Perhaps not, but your cash-strapped community
school does.’
2. Sexual
tension
The hero and
heroine can hate each other on sight, or as in Leo and Eliza’s case have a
bitter past history, but even so they must feel sexually attracted to each
other and it must be obvious to the reader right from the start.
He
closed the distance between them in one stride. He towered over her, making her
breath stall again in her chest. She saw his nostrils flare as if he was taking
in her scent. She could smell his: a complex mix of wood and citrus and spice
that tantalized her senses and stirred up a host of memories she had tried for
so long to suppress.
3. Get
rid of back-story
The thing
about backstory is it’s terribly important for you as the writer to know it,
but not to dump it on the reader in the first few pages. You can trickle it in later
on or use dialogue or subtext to hint at what has gone on in the past. You
would be surprised at how little information the reader needs. Don’t forget
that part of the enjoyment of reading is the discovery of the different facets
of characters as the story unfolds.
I have told
the reader nothing about Eliza’s engagement to another man or why she ended her
affair with Leo four years ago, but on page 13 the reader reads:
She
waited for him to speak. The silence seemed endless as he sat there quietly
surveying her with that dark inscrutable gaze.
‘You’re
not wearing a wedding ring,’ he said.
Eliza
sought the awkward bump of the solitaire diamond with her fingers. ‘Yes… yes, I
am…’
His
eyes burned as they held hers, with resentment, with hatred. ‘Rather a long
betrothal, is it not?’ he said. ‘I’m surprised your fiancĂ© is so patient.’
Eliza
thought of poor broken Ewan, strapped in that chair with his vacant stare, day
after day, year after year, dependent on others for everything. Yes, patient
was exactly what Ewan was now…
4.
Tension on every page
I’ve read quite a lot of manuscripts and even
published books where not much is going on for page after page. Each scene must
have a purpose- it must drive the story forward or there is no point it being
there. Long passages of description are fine if you’re writing a travel article
but they slow a romance down and reduce tension. Keep the thread of tension
running through the story; keep your characters focused on each other and their
goals.
‘You’re
lying.’
Eliza
gave him a flinty glare. ‘That’s what really irks you, isn’t it, Leo? It still
rankles even after all this time. I was the first woman to ever say no to you.
You could have anyone you wanted but you couldn’t have me.’
‘I
could have you.’ His eyes burned with primal intent. ‘I could have you right
now and we both know it.’
5. Make it
emotional
I
spend a lot of time thinking about my characters and how they would be feeling
about what is going on in their lives. I see them as real people, as people I
could meet or interact with, so it’s important for me to have them behaving and
thinking and speaking in a way that is believable.
Ask
yourself: If I were this person with these issues going on in my life what
would I be feeling? Dig deeply, trawl your memory to see if you have felt a
similar emotion or speak to someone who has.
I
thought deeply about the scene where Eliza sees Leo’s little daughter for the
first time. I mentally walked with her into that nursery where Alessandra was
sleeping…
Eliza looked
down at the sleeping child, a dark-haired angel with alabaster skin; her tiny
starfish hands splayed either side of her head as she slept. Sooty black
eyelashes framed her little cheeks, her rosebud mouth slightly open as her
breath came in and then out. She looked small for her age, petite, almost
fragile. Eliza reached over the side of the cot and gently brushed a dark curl
back off the tiny forehead, a tight fist of maternal longing clutching at her
insides.
This could
have been our child...
6. Build the
stakes.
There
is a danger when writing a romance novel that the tension can fall flat once
the couple makes love. It is important to raise the emotional stakes even after
or because they have made that
physical commitment.
Eliza
is not free to have anything but a temporary affair with Leo while she stands
in for his absent nanny, although she hasn’t told him the full truth about her
circumstances.
‘Look, I don’t
want to spend the only time we have alone together arguing,’ Leo said. ‘That
wasn’t the point of going out to dinner this evening.’
‘What is the
point?’ Was it to make her fall in love with him again and then drop her cold?
Was it to make her feel even more wretched about her other life once this was
over?
He took one of
her tightly clenched hands and began to massage her stiff fingers until they
softened and relaxed. ‘The point is to get to know one another better,’ he
said. ‘I’ve noticed we either have made passionate sex or argue like fiends. I
want to try something different for a change.’
Eliza looked
at her hand in his, the way his olive skin was so much of a contrast to her
creamy one. She felt the stirring of her body the longer he held her. Those
fingers had touched every part of her body. They could make her sizzle with excitement
just by looking at them. It was becoming harder and harder to keep her emotions
hidden away. She wasn’t supposed to be falling in love with him again. She
wasn’t supposed to be dreaming of a life with him.
That was not
an option for her…
The
character with the most to lose is the one with the highest at stake. Sometimes
it is the hero, sometimes it is the heroine and sometimes it is both. Whatever
you decide in your story make sure the stakes are high and believable and worth
fighting for.
Happy
reading and writing!
Melanie
Milburne
A beautiful love affair and a burning betrayal...Eliza Lincoln is stunned to find Leo Valente at her door; four years ago his passionate embrace was a brief taste of freedom from her suffocating engagement. Until Leo discovered her secret...
Yet he hasn't come to rekindle their affair. He has a proposition he knows Eliza can't refuse: she's the only person who can help his small, motherless daughter. Torn, Eliza can't ignore a vulnerable child, but the last time she was near Leo her desire nearly consumed her. Is she willing to take that risk again now that the stakes are even higher?
Buy Links:
Amazon
Mills & Boon UK
Mills & Boon Aust
Harlequin
There's a kindle copy of HIS FINAL BARGAIN to one commenter. Tell us some of your tips for writing.
Mills & Boon UK
Mills & Boon Aust
Harlequin
There's a kindle copy of HIS FINAL BARGAIN to one commenter. Tell us some of your tips for writing.