Thursday, April 13, 2017

Tips for Creating the Push-Pull of Romance



Janet here. Readers expect romance novels to deliver an emotionally satisfying read. They want to see the characters overcome their pasts and the conflicts between them before reaching that emotionally satisfying "Happily ever after" ending. Conflict is story and keeps readers turning pages. Conflict also prevents the hero and heroine from falling in love until the end of the book when they’ve finally resolved the problems between them. Conflict is vital.

Still, we need to make sure these two are attracted in the midst of all the trouble. If we create heroes and heroines who are exactly right for one another, they'll be attracted, but when their goals and wounds are standing in the way, the trouble will push them apart. Readers enjoy the push-pull of our characters struggling to hold each other at arm’s length while their attraction and awareness of each other's good qualities grows.

                                        So how do we make that push-pull strong? 

  • We put the hero and heroine in close proximity.
The more the hero and heroine are together, the more opportunities they encounter for conflict and attraction. Marriage of convenience and mail-order bride stories have built-in togetherness. We inspirational authors must find a way to keep them together without violating propriety. I’ve had a hero live in a shed out back; another worked in the same office; two worked across the street from the heroine’s shop. I’ve had a heroine take care of the hero’s sick father. 
  • We create unwelcome sexual tension.
Sexual tension comes from the characters awareness of the pull to one another, whether it's physical, spiritual or emotional, but that attraction is unwelcome. If it's not, they'll fall in love immediately and the book is over. The reason the attraction is unwelcome varies with the story and the characters. Perhaps the hero and heroine are after the same thing and fear the attraction might make them ambivalent about fighting for the goal. Or perhaps s/he may want to focus on the goal, not get sidetracked by a pretty face or kind heart. Or the characters' wounds may be too painful to risk their hearts. Whatever the reason, the attraction should make things worse. 
  • We use the plot.
The plot and the romance are interconnected. The plot impacts the romance and the romance impacts the plot. When the plot requires the hero and heroine to join forces that forced togetherness will raise the stakes. In suspense novels characters are united in a common cause, often survival. When characters work together, attraction tugs them closer, but then mistrust kicks in, old wounds kick in, and they push back. Use the plot, the action/reaction to vary the characters emotional connection, to keep them off balance and to keep readers wondering how these two will ever be able to fall in love. The push-pull is a "dance" of sorts and fun for readers.  
  • We show the stimulus.
Award winning ABA author Virginia Kantra offered this tip in a workshop: Don't describe the emotion, describe the stimulus (what caused the emotion) in a way that recreates that emotion in the reader. To me, this is a huge tip but hard to do. Instead of focusing just on showing the characters reactions to the attraction, consider showing the stimulus in such a detailed, emotional way that the reader will get a knot in her throat or tears in her eyes, not just the character. Details are key. 




  •  We show the characters reactions to the attraction. 
If we're not careful the reactions we use can become redundant like overusing smiles, sighs and lumps in the throat. Too much of the same descriptions and readers will want to pull out their hair. Or ours. We all strive to show what our characters are feeling in fresh ways and to avoid "felt" which can mean we're telling as in: He felt angry. 
  1. The reaction may be merely in the characters thoughts. Introspection is fun to do, especially when what the characters think is contrary to their actions or dialogue.
  2. The reaction may be involuntary physical actions like knotted stomach, dry mouth.
  3. The reaction may be voluntary physical actions like a simple touch.
  4. The reaction may be through dialogue. It's fun to use light banter to connect characters. Or no dialogue. Silence is powerful. We can use subtext where what the two are talking about isn't what's going on underneath.
  5. The reaction may be observed by a secondary character as in "A Wonderful Life" when George's mom says: Mary lights up like a firefly when you enter the room.

  • We show the decisions the attraction produces.
The characters are so unnerved by unwanted feelings of attraction that they make plans for what to do to avoid it. If he feels he's bad news for the heroine, let's say, he'll decide to step away for her own good. But she'll see this as proof that she's gotten involved with exactly the wrong man, that he doesn't care when the opposite is true. Then we use something in the plot to tug them back together. We need to motivate all of this push-pull. Not just have them argue over trivial things, then apologize and get closer, then have another argument, apologize again, etc..Conflict isn't arguments, though it can lead to arguments and confrontation. Speaking of confrontation, when the heroine feels the hero is walking away emotionally, she may be relieved. Or near the book's end, she may decide to confront him and force the issue into the open. Timing is important.

Our hero and heroine should take the entire book to fall in love, starting with physical attraction, then quickly moving to respect and on to emotional and spiritual connection. When we've created characters that are exactly right for one another, readers will enjoy the push and pull of the romance, rooting for them as they overcome everything that stood between them to finally reach their happily ever after ending. 

Can you share an example of the push-pull of romance, either from a book you've read or written, or better yet, from your real life romance? If you have another suggestion for how to create the push-pull of romance, please share those.


For a chance to win a $15 Amazon gift card, leave a comment that fits today's conversation.


I brought a myriad of breakfast entrees that will either tug you to the buffet or if you're afraid of overindulging, may make you run for the exit. But then this is cyber food so no calories are involved. Enjoy the biscuits and sausage gravy, scrambled eggs, Eggs Benedict, Belgium waffles, pancakes with blueberries, grits and bacon served up with juice, coffee and a variety of tea. Grab a plate and let's talk romance.



Janet Dean grew up in a family who cherished the past and had a strong creative streak. Her father recounted fascinating stories, like his father before him. The tales they told instilled in Janet a love of history and the desire to write. Today Janet spins stories for Love Inspired Historical. She is a two-time Golden Heart finalist, a Genesis and a Carol finalist and a member of Romance Writers of America and American Christian Fiction Writers. Her novels are also Golden Quill, Gayle Wilson Award of Excellence, Booksellers Best and Inspirational Readers Choice Award finalists. Visit Janet at her Website: www.janetdean.net

134 comments :

  1. Hi Janet, as I reader I love the push-pull of the romance in a story. It keeps me riveted to the pages, cheering both the hero & heroine on as they strive to overcome obstacles in their relationship. I especially enjoy the reunion type stories where there was some hurt involved (either accidental or purposeful), and the two resolve to face the issues head on. And fight the attraction that is still there sizzling under it all :-) I REALLY love it when they rely on God to help them through!

    Two things that stuck out to me as I read your post. The first being "we inspirational authors must find a way to keep them together without violating propriety". Both marriage of convenience and mail-order bride themes are my top favorite. I've read some where maybe the husband is a rancher so he gives his wife the main house while he stays in the barn with the ranch-hands. Or,in say, a historical the husband stays on one wing of the house while the wife has the opposite wing. I really enjoy the respect & propriety that authors give these two as they get to know one another. It helps build my investment in the characters lives & deepens it.
    Secondly; "our hero and heroine should take the entire book to fall in love, starting with physical attraction, then quickly moving to respect and on to emotional and spiritual connection". Almost exactly what I was saying in my first point. I don't like when characters fall in love immediately (barring reunion stories) nor do I like them taking too long to fall in love where it becomes frustrating for me and I want to throw the book out the window...(NO I would never do that literally!). I like to see the relationship build up, and not just be based on physical attraction. That's shallow to me! A good romance story for me is one of mutual respect, a little conflict as they strive to overcome obstacles (even of the heart), friendship built & common spiritual ground. I especially love to see when one character is a Christian and helps to either build up the other characters faith or help them to come to faith in Christ :-) I know that's one other conflict that I've read in a book; one is a Christian and one is not or is wavering in their faith. Seeing God bridge that gap is always amazing!

    Lots to think about today! What a great lot of points you brought up for the push-pull relationship between characters. It's one thing I do love (or hate to love depending, lol) while reading a good book.
    Thank you also for the Amazon gift card chance. I'd use it to buy more books, of course! Blessings.

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    1. Trixi, Good morning! Your in-depth comment is spot on! All those aspects you mention make the romance fun to write and to read.

      Thanks for bringing up reunion stories. I hadn't thought to mention them in the post. The hero and heroine usually have strong conflict but also strong attraction. Reunion stories are also perfect for novellas where the romance has to develop more quickly yet feel realistic.

      Janet

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    2. Thanks for sharing your thoughts, Trixi! Great points.

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    3. I'm finishing up a reunion story right now! What has made it easier to write is that the H/H already have a history, so the "getting to know you" phase is mostly in place.

      But now they have to learn who each other is now-- what has changed, what hasn't, and whether what initially kept them apart is something that can be overcome.

      So the attraction is there, but also the doubt, the lack of trust, the memories of how much the breakup hurt.

      Oh, the angst! It's been both fun and a challenge to bring this couple back together!

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    4. Myra, the story sounds great! That lack of trust over what happened in the past is a strong conflict. Readers will love seeing how they overcome and find their HEA.

      Janet

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  2. Hi Janet! I love the "stimulus" quote!

    And your summing up the progression of attraction from physical, to mental (respect), then emotional and spiritual is genius.

    The push and pull of romance was especially fun to write in my upcoming novella (rather shameless plug) in the Of Rags and Riches Romance Collection from Barbour.

    My immigrant housemaid Ella is borrowing her employer's dresses to pursue a wealthy marriage that will save her family from starvation in Poland... So her attraction to my poor-but-mysterious cart driver hero is a keen nuisance in the beginning. She's first attracted to the hero's appearance and chivalrous manners, then the meet cute brings out his protective streak, and that charms her as well as his care for helpless street kids. His spiritual depth resonates a chord in her and challenges her, then you've got his "I like you and don't care if you know it" stage where he's in full on romantic pursuit, but the stakes have risen with her family, so she needs an advantageous marriage more than ever. For the hero, her compassion toward those he holds dear wins his respect, and her "shy" reticence is a challenge he readily accepts. But by the time he finds out she must marry someone else, he's already half in love with her. :) That was loads of fun to write. I just hope the tension comes across on the page half as angsty as I felt it when writing. :) I really wish I'd had more than 20K words to spend on those two and stretch out that tension--as well as the HEA.

    Thanks for this post, Janet! I really enjoyed exploring this topic!

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    1. Hi Natalie! Great to see you here and to get a peek at your novella. You've given the hero and heroine a huge obstacle. I'm eager to find out how they overcome it as they're obviously perfect for each other. The push-pull is fun to write and easier when the stakes are high as you've made them with Ella having family she must save from starvation. When the author feels the tension, the emotion, I think the reader will too.

      Janet

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    2. Natalie, you did pay Ella's taxes, right?
      Kathy Bailey

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  3. P.S. Sorry for all the deleted comments. Blogger duplicated them!

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    1. I got rid of them..but I was reading your comment and my eyes bugged..you have an immigrant housemaid named Ella? HA! I read on for clarification.

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    2. Tina, LOL! Were you envious? :-)

      Janet

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    3. Yes. I'd take a dog who dusts at this point.

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    4. My dogs don't dust. They just shed and shred paper. But I love them anyway.

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    5. One of our grand dogs loves shredding tissues and paper. He's big enough to reach the edge of counters and tables. Nothing is safe with him around. But he redeems himself by his love for people. The only way he'd dust is to somehow corral his wagging tail.

      Janet

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    6. A dusting dog would be nice... mine cause more dust than they clean, that's for sure! Send fictional Ella here, darling Natalie... and I'll have her do some fictional cleaning!

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  4. As a reader I have always called this push-pull of romance a "dance". Wonderful to read. Marriage of convenience stories are a great favorite of mine.

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    1. Mary, I'm always impressed that readers are so very savvy about storytelling. Marriage of conveniences are a favorite of mine too.

      Janet

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    2. Mary Preston, that's how it seems to me, too!!!

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  5. haha! The push pull of romance in real life is..I want a veggie pizza and he wants meat lovers. hahahaha!

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    1. Tina, and the hero and heroine find a way to overcome the conflict by ordering half one topping and half another. :-)

      Janet

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    2. Tina, it will never work out.
      KB

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    3. Real life for me is Project Guy wants to socialize and I'd rather stay home. After 45 years, we're still in the push-pull phase.

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    4. Myra, now that's real life. LOL There's always differences that bring balance to a couple but also keep things...uh, interesting.

      Janet

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  6. Hi Janet,

    I'm going to be thinking about the stimulus all day.

    For over a week, I've been working on my characters' needs and why they can't be together. It's not easy when they clearly DO belong together. Ha!

    My example come from the movie While You Were Sleeping. The hero is intrigued and begins to fall for Lucy, but he thinks Lucy is his brother's fiance. He can't act on his feelings out of loyalty to his brother who is in a coma. But they keep getting thrown together but can't come out and declare their love. Until the end. When everything blows up.

    Thanks for sharing Janet!

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    1. Jackie is deconstructing movies!!!! SO PROUD OF YOU!!!

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  7. Hi Jackie, for some reason blogger wouldn't let me reply directly to your comment.

    When the characters are trying to fall in love too early in the book, I look at their back story and give them more painful pasts that have wounded them and keep them leery of love. Or faith can be an issue between them. Best of all is a strong external conflict that keeps them apart, as is true in "While You Were Sleeping." Thanks for sharing the great example! You've made me want to see the movie again.

    Janet

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  8. Thank you, Janet, this is a good post and so necessary.
    My Oregon Trail story is a secret baby AND reunion story, the heroine had the hero's baby after he had taken off and it died, but they find themselves thrown together again on the Oregon Trail. He's the scout and she's the cook for him and the wagon master, so they can't escape each other. She has since become a Christian, but she struggles with forgiveness for him, and he struggles with guilt for leaving her behind and feelings of unworthiness. There's a fair amount of push-pull as she realizes she still loves him, but she won't be yoked to an unbeliever, and as he wrestles with what he did and finally lays it at the Cross. I love the Trail as a mechanism for throwing couples together, it's not like they can take a bus home when things get too intense.
    We need to come up with valid reasons why a couple can't be together, and then make it happen that they can. Killing their first spouse usually isn't an option. :)
    Faith is a huge issue between the couple in my Speedbo project for this year. Jane is an agnostic, due to a painful childhood experience of abuse. Noah is a pastor, but he struggles to overcome a frat-boy, party-boy past and doesn't feel adequate for the job of shepherding a congregation. They are thrown together when she comes back to her small town to help her grandmother recover from a hip replacement (TMI?) and Gram recruits her to run the community Christmas festival, which happens to be under the oversight of Noah's church.
    I'm still reading the book by Tamera Alexander (It's LOOOONGGGG) and she does this rather well. Claire, her heroine, is an aspiring artist who was drawn into forgery by her late father. Sutton, the hero, is on the trail of INVESTIGATING a series of forgeries. So they're at cross-purposes from the get-and-go.
    Really, on these we are only limited by the limits of human emotion.
    Kathy Bailey

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    1. Kathy, thanks for sharing these great examples of the push-pull of the romance. Your Oregon Trail story sounds wonderful with huge obstacles, yet every opportunity for attraction. Faith or the lack of it is a huge conflict. You've done a beautiful job setting up the conflict in both of your stories.

      I'm grinning at your comment that killing off the first husband isn't usually an option since that's exactly what my hero did in The Bounty Hunter's Redemption. Still he was a bad guy, a lousy husband. :-)

      Janet

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  9. Thank you for such a helpful post, Janet. Love the stimulus quote too. Hits the nail on the head.

    I'm getting ready to write my first story that is more than just a "bare thread" of romance, so I'm hanging on every word here. My story is kinda complicated, because my hero falls for his "dead" best friend's fiancé. But it's sort of a one-way romance because she refuses to believe her man is really dead.
    It's sort of a love triangle, so I'm not even sure it really fits the "romance" genre, considering my hero ends up without the girl because of self-sacrifice.

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    1. Good morning, Amber! ABA author LaVyrle Spencer wrote a love triangle story where the heroine's husband was lost at sea and assumed dead. She and his best friend fall in love, but then the husband she very much loved comes back. Some romance editors are leery of love triangles as they want the heroine and hero to have only one person that will do. If your hero sacrifices the girl, I'm wondering if the dead husband isn't dead after all. :-)

      Janet

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    2. I seem to recall a novel by Deborah Raney with a similar plot. It was heartrending.

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    3. Myra, sounds like a great emotional story!

      Can anyone recall LI publishing a love triangle?

      Janet

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  10. Hi Janet
    Thank you for this really helpful post. I like your point about describing the stimulus rather than the emotion.
    I try to think about the difference between how a man thinks and how the woman thinks. (There's a challenge!) What does he see when she approaches or is near, as opposed to what she thinks he should see? Things that cause reaction in him are different from those that cause reaction in her.

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    1. Hi Barbara. Excellent point! We do need to show how the point of view character sees the other character and the setting. It's trickier to write a man's thoughts since most romance writers aren't men, but it's important. Thanks for the reminder.

      Janet

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  11. This was interesting. I'd loves to be entered in gift card drawing.

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  12. Mmm, Eggs Benedict! It's been an age!

    This is a wonderful post - full of great writing tips. Saving it. :)

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    1. Good morning, Dana. Eggs Benedict is a favorite of mine. Enjoy!

      Thank you. It's always nice to hear that a post is worth saving.

      Janet

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  13. Push-pull romance is a new term to me. Thanks for defining that for me Janet. I get this - really I do - but it's hard. I love my characters (mostly) and hate to put them through all that angst. But then - who wants to read it if I don't. Thanks so much Janet - really enjoyed this post.

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  14. When I think of that push-pull sexual attraction, two dancing scenes from major musicals come to mind - the scene in The Sound of Music when Captain Von Trapp and Maria are dancing the Laendler, and The King and I, when Anna and the King sing/dance to Shall We Dance. There's very little dialogue and you can't read their thoughts like in a book, yet through just the act of dancing, the tension is thick enough to slice with a knife. That's the kind of tension I'd love to capture on a page (or in a bottle--one could make a fortune on it).

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    1. Rachael, thanks for sharing these wonderful examples of sexual tension in great movie's dance scenes. We can do that in books, but like you say, it's not easy to get it on the page. Or in a bottle. :-)

      Janet

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    2. I love both of those scenes--so much subtext going on!

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  15. Hi Cindy, you're obviously a kind person. I enjoy putting my characters through the wringer. :-) Though finding ways to keep raising the stakes and making things worse isn't easy. And your right, enjoy it or not, we writers have to create trouble for our characters. Wishing you the best with that!

    Janet

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  16. Hi Janet. Interesting post. When thinking of a push-pull romance in literature I think of Mr. Darcy and Elizabeth in Pride and Prejudice. I think Jane Austen did that well in all her books.

    As for my real life romance, not so much. By the time I met my husband, we were both older and knew what we wanted. We actually set our wedding date two weeks after our first date, although we didn't actually get engaged for another six months.

    Please enter me for the Amazon card!

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    1. Sandy, that's amazing! What a sweet story!

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    2. Sandy, thanks for sharing the excellent push-pull example of P&P.

      You and your DH just had the pull--very romantic. Was it love at first sight for both of you?

      You're entered in the drawing.

      Janet

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    3. Janet, I think it was love at first sight more or less. I probably need to share a bit more about how we met. It was at a church single's group which I started with the sole intent of finding a husband. (I think I originated the concept of the Bachelorette show!) I had asked people to bring board games and snacks, but I wasn't very good at getting things going when people just stood around and didn't say what they wanted to do. So my now husband jumped right in to organize things, so I was instantly smitten with that. I guess he also felt the same because I am forbidden from getting rid of the sweater I was wearing that night!

      I guess there was a bit of a complication at the beginning. He actually showed up with another woman, although he didn't seem to have anything to do with her. They came together the next two times, and I was trying to figure out if they were actually a couple. One night we had pizza and everybody paid me for it, and she said he would pay for her. I found out later that he was quite upset about that. The reason they kept coming together was that he had dated her a few times but tried to tell her he wasn't interested. She kept calling him to ask if he would pick her up for the church event, and he was too nice to say no. (If I had known, I wouldn't have sent her an invitation!) Anyway, he finally told her that he was not going to be seeing her again and we had our first date. It was pretty much smooth sailing after that!

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    4. Sandy, Your husband sounds like a terrific guy! Too nice to hurt the other woman's feelings. No wonder you were confused. The right woman won in the end. :-) A HEA if I ever heard it! Thanks for sharing.

      Janet

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  17. Excellent points, Janet! You had me mentally going through my wip to see how well I'd handled the push-pull. It really is a delicate balance to work in enough attraction to keep them interested while throwing complications at them that threaten to derail the romance.

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  18. Myra, that balance is tricky, the reason I called it a dance. At least learning dance steps is tricky for me. Not sure but we might've been the Arthur Murray dance studio's only failure. :-)

    Janet

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    1. LOL!!! Project Guy and I took a dance class a zillion years ago. NOTHING stuck! Dancing With the Stars will not be knocking on our door anytime soon.

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    2. Myra, ours either We took lessons so my dh could do the father-daughter dance at our firstborn's wedding. He was able to handle that so it was worth the time and money but we've only got a vague sense of the foxtrot now.

      Janet

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  19. My favorite part of the romance has always been the angst. After they get together and are all kissy-kissy was definitely my least favorite- unless something tears them apart again. I want to be forced to the point of begging the author to please let the characters kiss already. Please.

    So that's what I try to do in my own stories. My WIP right now is a lot of angst between a man who thinks he's a widower because his wife told him she died. In his defense, he's a bit of an amnesiac and she's a paranoid master of disguise and deceit.

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    1. Boo, I love angst too! You've designed these characters for trouble. I'm fascinated by your heroine. How will you make her likable to readers? Or is she really the story's villain?

      Janet

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    2. Boo, you love the drama of the chase... this is so delightful and normal, especially in the teen years... I bet you handle that very well in your work.

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    3. In my heroine's defense, she has had a tough time of it and has reasons for her paranoia. Her one ambition now is to save and protect her babies, no matter the cost.

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  20. Hi Janet:

    Your excellent post today provides a very comprehensive coverage of the push/pull, love/attraction, up/down, conflict-riddled, nature of the falling in love process. While I have two more examples to share, they may very well be subsets of those you've already elucidated in this post. I'll give them anyway.

    The first is 'self-deception'. When this is skillfully done the reader can feel in a superior position to the character who the reader understands is deceiving him or herself. This invests the reader more fully in the story and creates an Anticipatory Event the reader looks forward to being resolved in the character's awaking to the truth of the situation.

    I just love lots of AEs. Jack Reacher seems to have several AEs per chapter. That's because events which might just happen are rather set up as AEs instead. While conflict can stimulate 'page turning', so can non-conflict AE's in which the reader is just anxious to see how something is going to turn out whether conflict related or not.

    Second is having a conflicting love interest. This works great to turn pages but I don't recommend it. I'm reading such a book now, "How to Charm a Beekeeper's Heart", in which the hero has been terribly hurt by a woman, the heroine has been even more grievously injured by a man and the second hero is a widower who deeply loved his wife and who is just now, after years, ready to risk falling in love again. This second hero has even asked the heroine to marry him and has just given her a beautiful engagement ring. This happens just after the heroine has been told by hero 1 that he loves her, a man she has been in love with all her life, and that she is the first woman he has ever told he loved! Hero 1 has been a career 'player' but is now truly in love and ready to settle down with one woman.

    To add to the conflict the heroine's young daughter wants hero 1 as a daddy for her upcoming birthday present.

    Oh, and hero 2 is off to Floridian to attend to his dying mother! The heroine is pretty much an emotional basket case at this point in the story!

    I'm 84% into the story and I ask you, "How can this story end well?" Can there be an HEA when one of the heroes is crushed? I haven't read a book as reader-conflicting as this one since I was rooting for the hero in Julie's second book not to marry Charity!

    Wow! While it is easy to have a second love interest who is a cad and the heroine chooses the good guy, what do you do when both heroes are great and worthy guys? Well, I'll just have to turn some more pages!

    Vince

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    1. Vince, thanks for mentioning the fun of creating characters that deceive themselves and how fun it is for the reader to anticipate what will happen when the truth finally smacks them in the face.

      Characters can also deceive others. :-) It's fun to anticipate what will happen when the secret is exposed and everything blows up in their faces.

      Keep reading How to Charm a Beekeepers Heart, then let me if you felt the HEA was satisfying when only one hero could be the "right" man.

      Janet

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    2. VINCE SAID: "I haven't read a book as reader-conflicting as this one since I was rooting for the hero in Julie's second book not to marry Charity!"

      LOL ... did you really? Poor Charity!! Nobody understood her but me. ;) Well, hopefully the Beekeeper book can surprise and satisfy you with a solid HEA!

      Hugs,
      Julie

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    3. Julie, just remember love or hate is way better than indifference!

      Janet

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  21. Thank you, Janet. These are great tips! I have to go back and review my wip now!

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    1. LeAnne, thanks! There's so many aspects to writing a novel. Like you, I always check to make sure I haven't short-changed all the important elements.

      Janet

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  22. This is a very timely post!
    In my current MS, the hero is a spy. He's madly in love with the heroine but he cannot tell her. I'm trying to show his conflict by contrasting his thoughts and the actual words he says.
    "You're so quiet," she said. "What are you thinking right now?"
    I'm thinking I want to stay here with you. I want your face to be the last thing I see before I go to sleep and the first thing I see when I wake up. "It's getting late," he said. "I should go."

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    1. Evelyn, thanks for sharing this terrific example of how conflicted characters feel one thing but say another. Your story sounds great!

      Janet

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    2. That sounds like such an interesting story- my hero is a spy too (and technically, so is the heroine). I love spies! You'll have to tell me when you publish and what it's called.

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  23. I definitely feel more emotions with stories that pull the feelings out of me by showing me, not telling me, how the characters are reacting to each other. I love it when it is a roller coaster ride of heart tugging emotions!

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    1. Susan, readers can "become" the character and experience all the emotion the character goes through. Indeed an emotional roller coaster ride! Thanks for sharing with us.

      Janet

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  24. Love this post! This: I need to work on this for my stories. I see the end: they belong together. Maybe I need to write the end first, get them together, and then go back and put them through the wringer??

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    1. Sally, I'm more of a linear writer but some authors write the ending first. In fact I think Vince recommends doing that. For me I need to have strong external goals that keep them apart in order to write the story and I start there, but give it a try. See what works for you.

      Janet

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  25. I love this, Janet! What a great post! I'm racing toward the end of a novella right now, about to type The End today, I hope. So I'll have to come back and re-read when I have more time to really focus. :)

    I'm going to print and frame Virginia's quote!! Such great advice!

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    1. Missy, cheering you on as you race to the finish of your novella! The End is great fun to type. Go YOU!

      Virginia's tip is fantastic. I think I need to come up with a list of examples on how to do this--for myself--because focusing on the stimulus feels a bit foreign to me. Though maybe there are times we do this subconsciously. Hoping!

      Janet

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  26. Great post, Janet! "Silence is Powerful." Love that! So true in writing and life. One of my favorite push/pull movies is WHEN HARRY MET SALLY. The entire movie seems to be a tug of war.
    Happy Easter!

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    1. Hi Jill. Thanks for sharing a excellent example of the push-pull of attraction. Now I want to watch that movie again. I love romantic comedies, but good ones still have plenty of romantic conflict.

      Janet

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  27. Janet, a lot of food for thought here...pun intended. I'm vegan, so I'll just look at the buffet with longing.

    My hero isn't as exciting as I'd like him to be. Of course, he has the heroine all angsty by just looking at him. I need to make his wound deeper, but being a softy it's hard for me to do that. How can I pull myself out of my kind-heartedness, and become a meany?

    The one thing that gets me wiggling in my seat is when the h/h just stare at each other. I can feel the push-pull, and start imagining (or imaging) what is going on in their heads.

    Please enter me in the drawing.

    Awesome post!

    Blessings,

    Marcia

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    1. Marcia, I love locked gazes that linger until one of them has to look away. Wow, great stuff!

      As to how to pull yourself out of being kindhearted and become a meany, remember that what tortures the hero took place in the past and you're going to give him a great new beginning. You're probably thinking that he's got to go through a lot of conflict before he gets there, but doesn't that make the happily ever after ending all the sweeter??

      I hope you'll bring some vegan items to add to the buffet next time. I hate that we've left you or others out.

      Janet

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  28. Great post, Janet. You're an excellent teacher. You take difficult concepts and present them in a clear, understandable way. Kudos to you!!!

    I'm mulling over Virginia Kantra's advice. Interesting. To describe the stimulus. Not sure if I do this...

    Can you provide an example, Janet?

    Perhaps a rough and tumble hero reaching out to a small child in need. Is that what she means?

    I've struggled with my first chapter for far too long and just moved to chapter two. All of a sudden, my reticent hero and heroine are coming alive. I'm breathing a sigh of relief and am eager to see what happens in chapter three! :)

    Why are beginnings always such a challenge? Or maybe they aren't a problem for anyone else. These Amish characters don't reveal their inner thoughts easily so I have to pull the story from them. Glad I'm over the first hurdle!

    Holy Thursday blessings to all!!!

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    1. Debby, To me Virginia's tip means that whatever the hero or heroine encounter whether a hurt child, each other or some scary happening, instead of focusing on the point of view character's reaction to what they're experiencing--their physical reactions/actions and thoughts--that the writer needs to focus on showing the thing that upset or frightened or touched them with so much detail that the reader will react herself, not just read about the character's reactions. In other words, focus on the stimulus more than on the character's reaction. Does that make sense? I'm not sure I'm doing this. I've written a scene where the heroine experiences a terrible scare. She's reacting in her thoughts and actions/reactions, but I think I need to ramp up my description of the stimulus (the scary guy) so that he'll scare the reader as much as the character.

      Congratulations on prying open your characters minds and hearts! Hope each chapter gets easier to write. I always find that it takes a lot of words on the page before I know my story people.

      Holy Thursday blessings to you too.

      Janet

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    2. Beginnings are SO hard!! I did the same thing where I went ahead with the second and third chapter and will go back to the first chapter soon, but I'm afraid I'll get stuck again!

      I'd also love an example of describing the stimulus. In my book, my single mom falls sick with a nasty virus and the Hero comes by to take care of her. I focused mostly on his care for her rather than her reaction to it. Is that what Virginia means?

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    3. Hi Josee, I think the middles and endings are hard too. :-) Hope you don't get stuck in Chapter One!

      To use your example, you would focus more on the stimulus--in this case the sick heroine--than on the hero's reaction/concern for her. Give details that show her suffering such as clammy skin, fevered brow, damp hair and shivering body. I'm not recommending writing paragraph after paragraph describing her symptoms as that could get tedious. But when you sprinkle them in and even show her getting worse--perhaps, she's delirious and nothing the hero's doing seems to help, the reader will be scared for her and react too. I'm really ashamed to tell this, but I remember reading such a strong description of a sick hero that I forgot myself for a moment and prayed for him. I immediately asked God's forgiveness. But when we describe the stimulus strongly enough, the reader will react. Does this make sense now?

      Janet

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    4. I jump right in with beginning and they always get a total makeover in the end. I think that's the key, just jump in. We know how critical that first chapter is so the editor on our shoulder is screaming. That's what makes it hard.

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    5. Great point, Tina! Actually my editor on the shoulder scares me a lot. Thankfully not my real life editor.

      Janet

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  29. I agree with Trixi's comment at the very beginning of the comments! I want the romance to be built on respect and friendship and trust but then have that conflict they have to overcome to know that it's a "lasting" romance! If they fall in love to early, it's suspect (although there is that whole love at first sight thing - ha ha!!!). However, there has to be the first "spark" of something or they wouldn't continue with the romance! I do NOT like books that drag the "getting to know you" phase out too long and then rush the romance at the end! As a reader I want to enjoy the romance a little before the book ends! I don't want to have the last 2 pages of romance and then BAM, the book is over!

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    1. Valri, your point that you want the hero and heroine to start falling in love over a period of time is excellent. They keep seeing the good in each other but even as they do, we need to make sure something happens that makes them push back. So it's up and down but building too because no one wants a rushed ending.

      Janet

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  30. First, that's a monster buffet!!! :)

    Second, this is a strong lesson in building...

    Debby, I'm not sure what Virginia means there, either... is she talking internal conflict + backstory = reason to be impacted?

    I don't know.

    And I'm glad you got through your beginning!

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    1. Ruthy, thanks! I'm late but finally got around to putting out ham, chicken and eggs fixings for salads and sandwiches. We eat our way through the day. :-)

      Virginia is suggesting we emphasize the stimulus more than the response to the stimulus of the character whose head were in. I go into more detail in my reply to Debby above. Hope what I said makes it clearer. I should've explained it better in the post.

      Janet

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  31. Thank you for your post, Janet! That push/pull is crucial to a page-turning romance. We all know they're going to end up together but it's the when? and the how? that makes up the story. Tale as old as time!

    One of my favorite tropes are friends turned lovers. I love reading where the character is obviously falling in love and I can't wait to find out when he or she realizes it, too!

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    1. Hi Josee, you've explained why romance is so popular when the happily ever after ending is a promise.

      Friends turned lovers is fun! Perhaps at first a character or both use self-deception as Vince discusses to keep from realizing their friendship has taken a wonderful turn. :-)

      I tried to answer your question above about Virginia Kantra's tip. Hope it helps explain what I think it means.

      Janet

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  32. Cheryl, great to see you here! Any tips or examples from one of your books that you'd care to share?

    Janet

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  33. WOW, JANET, excellent post, my friend -- you sure did your homework!! This could be a blog workshop!!

    I do have a question about Virginia Kantra's quote, however. She said, "Don't describe the emotion, describe the stimulus (what caused the emotion) in a way that recreates that emotion in the reader."

    I like the sound of that, but could you give me a concrete example from her book? It sounds like she is saying to show, not tell (i.e. instead of saying he was happy, show it with a sparkle in his eyes, a whistle on his lips, etc.), but I'm not 100% sure I'm understanding that right.

    Hugs,
    Julie

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  34. JANET, thank you for the great post. As a reader, I am engaged in the story when there is push-pull romance. It makes a captivating story.

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    1. Caryl, I always enjoy a readers perspective! Thanks!

      Janet

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  35. Hi Julie, thanks for your sweet words. I got the quote from a RWA workshop Virginia gave. I'll share the example I used earlier when Josee asked the same question and mentioned a scene she was writing where the heroine's sick and the hero is taking care of her.

    To use your example, you would focus more on the stimulus--in this case the sick heroine--than on the hero's reaction/concern for her. Give details that show her suffering such as clammy skin, fevered brow, damp hair and shivering body. I'm not recommending writing paragraph after paragraph describing her symptoms as that could get tedious. But when you sprinkle them in and even show her getting worse--perhaps, she's delirious and nothing the hero's doing seems to help, the reader will be scared for her and react too. I'm really ashamed to tell this, but I remember reading such a strong description of a sick hero that I forgot myself for a moment and prayed for him. I immediately asked God's forgiveness. But when we describe the stimulus strongly enough, the reader will react.

    I also mentioned in another reply that I'm not suggesting that writers not show the POV character's reaction but that it's better when the reader is reacting on her own, not just through the character.

    Clear as mud?

    Janet

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  36. That's an interesting point about describing the stimulus so it recreates that emotion in the reader. I wonder if that's what my favorite writers do. Sometimes I'm so deeply into their stories that when I look up from reading I'm a bit disoriented for a few seconds.

    I have vivid memories of one suspense novel in which the hero was pursuing the bad guy up a mountain ... in bitter cold ... in a blinding snow ... with a cutting wind ... he was slipping on icy rocks ... climbing, climbing, climbing. I was cold and exhausted by the end of that chapter :-)

    When it comes to romances, I like the push-pull-sparks-flying like in the old Hepburn-Tracy movies. And no, I didn't see those movies when they were first runs ... I saw them many years later on TV LOL

    Thanks for a super teaching post, Janet.

    Nancy C

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    1. I love Adam's Rib with Hepburn and Tracy. One of my favorites. I also really like Desk Set.

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    2. Nancy C, I love that you were cold and exhausted after reading about the hero's pursuit of the bad guy during a cold, strenuous climb up that mountain. You proved how much story can rope readers in.

      I think it's time for me to revisit the Hepburn-Tracy movies.

      Janet

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  37. I was editing something last night and I kept thinking that "my character sure smiles a lot." I overuse a lot of things.

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    1. Walt, I do the same thing. It drives me crazy! My characters are always smiling and grinning. haha

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    2. Walt and Missy, you two are so nice and happy, you can't help but share your lovely smiles with your characters!

      Janet

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    3. I'm so laughing (smiling) because I overuse this also.

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  38. Janet, such a helpful post! I loved the push/pull of Linda Chaikin's Port Royal series. Also Francine River's Mark of the Lion series.

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    1. Hi Jenny, thanks for sharing two series that showcase the push-pull of romance.

      Janet

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  39. Ok, Janet...I'm a big fan of Virginia Kantra...have all her books. I picked out Carolina Blues, and found a passage. See what you think...am I on the right track?

    To set this up...she has PTSD and was a hostage. There's more to it, but this is how her mind works. She left her laptop in the bakery where she works, and goes there to get it. Unbeknownst to her the owner has installed a new alarm system and hasn't been able to give her the details. She goes in, alarm goes off, she goes into full panic attack. The hero, who is the police chief finds her in this condition:

    "He hunkered down beside her, his weight on the balls of his feet. Not crowding, not threatening, not even touching her the way he wanted to. Just there. Her dark, dilated gaze fixed anxiously on his face. He began to breathe slowly in and out. In through the nose, out through the mouth, deeply, deliberately, again, regulating her breath with his, until the rhythm caught and held, until she realized what he was doing and began to breathe in time with him, in and out, in an intimate cadence like sex.
    Until they matched, sharing the same rhythm, the same breath. The tension screwing his insides slipped half a notch." (Carolina Blues, Virginia Kantra, 2014, Berkley/Penguin)

    Hope this was a good example, let me know

    Marcia

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    1. Marcia, that's a great example. Virginia's POV character hero focuses on the panicked heroine/the stimulus, which enables the reader to feel empathy for her too. The subtle way he helps calm her through his breathing reveals he's a great guy and probably has dealt with panicked people before.

      I'll also remember this as an example of how we writers can create connection with very little in the way of action and no dialogue.

      Janet

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  40. Janet, I enjoyed reading your post and the many comments. When I read Amber's synopsis of her new book, I was reminded of one of my favorite movies. In 'His Favorite Wife', Irene Dunne returns after being presumed dead for seven years and Cary Grant is about to marry again. He is torn and then angry when he learns that she wasn't alone on the island. True love does prevail after many trials and misunderstandings and there was nothing off color in this movie other than what the individual viewer suspected.
    Blessings!
    Connie
    cps1950(at)gmail(dot)com

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    1. I love that movie! I love Irene Dunne as Ellen Wagstaff Arden. When she turns to Cary Grant and tells him she had a brooch exactly like the one Bianca is wearing, 'z-actly, I always crack up. Of course, I love Cary Grant movies so I could keep writing about this all day!

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    2. Connie, thanks for sharing an example of the push-pull of romance. I don't remember watching "His Favorite Wife" but I'm adding it to my list of movies I want to see.

      Janet

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    3. Tanya, nice to find another fan of this movie! Cary Grant was one handsome hero.

      Janet

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  41. Thanks for sharing your great ideas. This is something I need to work on. My husband was attracted to me before I was interested in him. We had a merry chase until my interest emerged.

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    1. Bettie, Push-pull or chase-be chased all sound like great romance stories to me! Thanks for sharing.

      Janet

      Janet

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  42. I typed The End today! So I'm just now getting back to your fantastic post, Janet. Thanks for this great list of suggestions! I'll use it while reading through my mss.

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    1. Congratulations on typing The End, Missy!!

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    2. Missy, congratulations on finishing your book! Now you can have fun thinking about the push-pull of the romance.

      Janet

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  43. This is such a helpful post, Janet. Love these tips and ideas. So many areas I need to work on. You said: "Our hero and heroine should take the entire book to fall in love, starting with physical attraction, then quickly moving to respect and on to emotional and spiritual connection." I think that's one of my weakest areas. I want them to fall in love immediately, LOL. I have to remind myself to slow down and let the relationship evolve over time. Thanks again!

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    1. Laura, I know, I've had to wait three books for my character's relationship to just get THIS far, and they haven't even had their first kiss yet. I just want to reach into my book and shake my characters and ask them, "What's taking you so long?!"

      But then they remind me that it is my fault for creating so much push pull between them. Plus they kind of needed to grow up a bit, but still...

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    2. LOL, I understand, Nicki. Even if we created these people, they don't always behave as we want.

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    3. Laura and Nicki, you may have to whip your characters into shape so they'll do what you want. Not that I'm suggesting violence. :-)

      Janet

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  44. The push pull in my book, is that the heroine and the hero have always been just friends for their entire lives, and she really just sees him as a brother. Until her actual brother mentions how he and her best friend have a bet on how long it will take her to kiss her childhood friend. Then it turns out that her friend has actually secretly had a crush on her for, like, a decade. My heroine is opposed to all changes, and has convinced herself that changing her relationship with her friend will just end badly, like with their lifelong friendship in tatters, only their constant feuding on the subject (plus some other interested parties become involved, which doesn't help matters at all) is already beginning to ruin their friendship... It gets so bad that they decide that maybe a little distance is needed. The problem is my heroine's brother is a notorious matchmaker and keeps making it so they end up having to be near each other.

    One of my favorite tropes in the YA genre is when the characters are on opposite sides/clans/want to kill the other, but end up falling in love instead (which definitely causes a lot of push pull). Kind of like Romeo and Juliet only less depressing.

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    1. Nicki, your hero and heroine may need that brother matchmaker to stop them from deceiving themselves. :-)

      Opposite sides stories sound like great fun. Though if they carry out the desire to kill one another that could put a damper on the romance. ;-)

      Janet

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  45. I think a good way to have a push-pull is when the hero or the heroine are not free to act on their attraction. That struggle creates tension. I like the example of 'While You Were Sleeping' which does that well.

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    1. Loraine, thanks for sharing a movie that shows the push-pull and the twist of a hero and heroine who can't act on their attraction.

      Janet

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  46. Janet, Thank you for the post. I also love the line about falling in love over the course of the book. My husband and I hit it off immediately, and the poor guy was thrown into the cauldron. When he took me out on our first date, it was the week of Thanksgiving so not only did he have to meet my parents, he also met my grandparents. As a result, I have to fight against having my characters immediately have a bond. And I love Virginia Kantra workshops so it was fun reading her suggestions for showing emotion and your elaboration and take on it. Thanks for this post.

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    1. Hi Tanya, your DH obviously knew you were worth being scrutinized by your family. My DH and I connected immediately too. Which just proves that stories aren't real life. :-)

      Janet

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  47. I love that quote from Virginia Kantra! That is what I'm looking for in a reading experience- being able to feel the emotions of the characters in myself, not just reading about them. Great post Janet!

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    1. Thanks Heidi! You're a lovely encourager.

      Janet

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  48. Hi Janet, Sorry I missed you today. Its actually still today here in Arizona. Only 9:20 pm But great post. Always enjoy what you have to say. I'm plotting out a story right now so this is not only helpful but very timely.

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    1. Hi Sandra, thanks for stopping in. Have fun plotting your new story!

      Janet

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  49. I felt the `love at first sight' and that immediately set up a push/pull when I met my husband. I was doing the pushing away at first, but that soon changed!

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    1. Hi Janet. I get that pushing away until you got used to the truth that you were meant for each other. :-)

      Janet

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  50. Well done, Janet!

    You do a great job of this in your books. Writing romance is a lot harder than reading it, for sure.

    The writers who don't ... well it shows. And makes for a less exciting book.
    Please enter me in your drawing.

    May God bless you and all of Seekerville!

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  51. Phyllis, thanks for your sweet words!

    Janet

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