Wednesday, January 27, 2021

Designing the Perfect Romance Cast

I'm teaching a new class beginning Feb. 1, 2021, so I thought I'd share a sample in case other writers would like to sign up. I've been teaching online classes for fifteen years or so now, but this one is brand new, so it's completely new material. I'm really excited about it. 

 You can sign up here. Here are some reviews of my classes.

Designing the Perfect Romance Cast

By Angela Knight

 

I want to thank you for taking my class on designing the perfect romance cast. It’s my objective with this class to give you the tools that can help you become a successful romance writer. The first step is to understand what romance readers are looking for — which is the key to becoming an autobuy.

As someone who made the New York Times list a few times, I’ve given this some thought.

Success for a romance novelist isn't a matter of poetic descriptions of sunsets, great costumes, witty dialogue, pulse-pounding fight scenes, or even toe-curling sex. What matters to romance readers is the answer to one question: “will these two people get their Happy-Ever-After?” The HEA needs to be seriously in doubt all the way through the book. The deck has to be stacked against the couple from page one.

Maybe he's a demon hunter and his seductive lover is a demon. Maybe he’s a widower Earl with four kids and not enough of the ready to maintain his estate, and she’s his penniless governess.

But the problem that ultimately drives the book can't be some purely external problem like money or social status. After all, people married their governesses all the time, so there must be more to it than that.

The real problem must come from inside the characters — their fears and emotional scars. Maybe the demon believes that despite everything good he does to win the hero's love, he's basically evil, and he can literally never be good enough. His hero knows demons are born deceivers who can never really be trusted.

Perhaps the governess heroine has been sexually harassed by prior employers, and trust doesn't come easily for her. Maybe her Earl has been played by social climbers before.

Those are the kinds of problems that make readers wonder how in the world you're going to get to Happily Ever After.

Luckily, your protagonists have a fabulous matchmaker on their side: the villain.

You read that right. More than any matchmaking Regency mama, a good villain is a romance author’s best friend. Every time your protagonists are ready to throw in the towel on their love, your antagonist does something nasty that drives them back together.

That doesn't mean the antagonist has to be out to destroy the world with a snap of his fingers. He can be your hero's deeply religious father, upset that his gay son is "going to hell." Daddy may try various well-meaning thing to make his son see the light. Things which, of course, backfire. Maybe he gets the hero fired, forcing him to move in with the secondary hero to save money.

Or if things are going well between the couple, Daddy can also do things to break the couple up. It all depends on where you are in the plot. The whole idea is to keep the reader wondering, "There’s no way they’re getting a Happy Ever After given this mess."

And it’s not just the antagonist, either. Every character, from protagonist to walk-on, must serve one of four purposes in every scene in your book:

1.      Increase the stress on the romance by posing either a physical or psychological threat to the relationship.

2.      Make one of the two protagonists more sympathetic through their interaction with them. That can be as dramatic as the protagonist saving the character, or as subtle as the protagonist's showing kindness or affection toward them. (We care about people who care about people.)

3.      Make the protagonist seem more realistic. It's hard to get worked up about the fate of cardboard people. If the character has no parents, boss, friends, or coworkers, the protagonist doesn't seem as real.

Even if the parents are dead, they must at least be mentioned. This is true even in a short story where space is at a premium. The mention of them doesn't have to be detailed, but you need at least a sentence or two about them.

4.      The character can act as a sounding board for the protagonist. Long periods of protagonist introspection are boring. If the protagonist argues their options with their best friend, it a lot more interesting. Especially if said friend thinks the protagonist's plan is nuts and they're going to end up dead.

 

In the next month, I'll elaborate on these ideas in lessons I'll post on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays.

On Tuesdays and Thursdays, you're invited to send me up to 2000 words in a Word file from your current work in progress. That can be scenes, raw ideas, or ideas that you're toying with. I'll give you my feedback in comments in the document. Email it to me and I'll respond privately.

Lessons will include:

1.      Introduction – How a good romance cast functions as a unit.

2.      What’s the big idea? – What kind of story do you want to tell? How do you make sure it would make a good book? Is it novel or novella, and how can you tell?

3.      From Rom-coms to Game of Thrones: What’s the subgenre for this kind of book, and why does it matter? What’s the audience for that subgenre, and what are they looking for?

4.      Brave New Worlds – Designing the story world, even a contemporary.

5.      Imperfect for Each Other -- Creating a heroic couple who’ll drive each other crazy… in and out of bed.

6.      A Match Made in Hell – Creating an antagonist to make your couple’s lives miserable … and keep readers up all night turning pages.

7.      Sidekicks – Supporting characters who bring your protagonists to life and make them question what the hell they’re doing.

8.      Henchmen – The importance of a good flunky with bad intentions.

9.      Perfect Pitch – How to give each character a realistic “voice.”

10.   Snark, Sarcasm and malice – Using humor to make readers laugh … or scare the daylights out of them.

11.  A Good Row – Writing a knock-down-drag-argument without making your characters sound like jerks.

12.  All Together Now – How to put everybody through their paces on the page.

 

I'm really looking forward to this class. I always learn a lot from teaching, and I find it helps my own writing. I hope it will help yours too.

Now, are there any questions?

Angela Knight

Monday, November 02, 2020

An Excerpt from Master of Desire

I've been very busy writing this summer. First up is Master of Desire, the next book in my Mageverse series, out now.

For half-Sidhe billionaire Conal Donovan, rich people problems include an ex who’s an evil Fairy goddess named Siobhan. When Siobhan sends a team of werewolf terrorists to kidnap and torture him, he’s rescued by Helena Baker, African American, former FBI agent, and wolf-shifter. But Conal’s not out of the woods, because Siobhan has sworn to kill him, his sisters, and all his Sidhe friends. He and Helena decide the only way to protect the innocent is to focus Siobhan’s vicious jealousy on them by pretending to be lovers.

Helena Baker’s best friend is a gun inhabited by a retired death god, so she can handle werewolves. She’s less sure about the handsome white guy with the talking phoenix and the relentless commitment to protecting his sisters. Especially considering that she’s in her Burning Moon -- the werewolf version of heat. Her pheromones make Conal just as interested in her as she is in him. But is their growing love real? And what will happen when the hormones wear off?

Love really shouldn’t be this complicated.

Buy Links: Amazon    Apple   Kobo   Changeling Press  (B&N Link coming soon.)

In this excerpt, Helena fights for her werewolf life as Conal tries to escape from the chair his werewolf kidnappers have chained him to. He's covered in werewolf bites, and suffering from blood loss.

***

Conal convulsed as the werewolves closed in on his would-be rescuer. His chains rattled. Any full-blooded Sidhe would have made short work of them -- the supposed fairy allergy to cold iron was a myth -- but he just didn’t have that much power. Twisting his wrists, he groped for the link he’d been trying to burn through. Torture made it tough to cast spells.

Blood loss, shock and pain had taken a toll on his abilities, but the sight of the female werewolf going down under her attackers sent a wave of blessed adrenaline through his body. Magic flared between his fingertips, and Conal gritted his teeth, fighting to maintain the shield that protected his skin as the link blazed hot, then finally parted.

Conal wrenched with the last dregs of his strength. Metal rattled as the ends of the chain dropped to the floor. Panting, he struggled to unwrap the loops. Finally the last of them fell away, and he heaved out of the chair. The room spun, but he steadied himself, tried to take a step… and fell on his face. He’d forgotten the chains binding his ankles to the chair legs. The impact jarred his savaged chest and belly, sending black spots dancing in front of his eyes. The darkness closed in…

Liam Neeson yelled in his ear, “Get up, boy, before they kill her!”

“The… fuck?” Blearily, he managed to open his eyes and turn his head toward the sound.

A shotgun lay on the floor about a yard away. “I said, get up!” the voice bellowed, coming from the weapon. Must be using the same speech spell as Essus. It still sounded like the Taken guy. The light finally dawned. That’s not an actor, that’s Maeve’s pet death god. Which meant his werewolf rescuer was Helena Baker.

“Pick me up!” the gun demanded. “The geas only lets me use my power if someone’s touching me.”

Which suggested Maeve didn’t trust the fucker. Not exactly a ringing endorsement, but Conal didn’t care. Even as another blazing wave of pain slashed his shredded belly, he groped for the gun with a shaking hand. Managed to grab Liam’s fat barrel. It felt hot under his fingers. “My ankles are still chained.”

Magic swirled around his legs. “Not anymore.”

His feet fell away from the chair, which now lay toppled across his butt. He kicked it away, gasping as agony ripped through him. “Can you heal me?”

“What part of ‘death god’ don’t you get?”

Dammit. He gathered his strength and forced himself to hands and knees. Teeth gritted, he braced his hand on the fallen chair and managed to stagger upright, dragging the gun with him. Remembered an unpleasant rumor. “Don’t kill me.”

“Fine! Just save Helena!” Was that fear in the god’s voice?

Steadying himself, Conal raised the weapon. Christ, Liam was heavy. One of the kidnappers, red as an Irish Setter, staggered back from the knot of battling werewolves, clutching a sliced throat. Conal fired, bracing himself against the shotgun’s ferocious kick. It almost knocked him on his ass, but the red werewolf’s head exploded.

One down. He shifted his aim to the snarling, writhing dog pile, all claws, curses, and snapping teeth. Helena had black fur, but there were at least two that color…

“Don’t fire,” Liam snarled. “You’ll hit her.”

“Can’t you guide the damn bullet?”

“That’s not how it works. The geas won’t let me hit anything but what you aim at. Can you use a sword?”

His lips peeled off bloody, sticky teeth. “Hell, yes.”

Magic lit his senses, burning his hands as the shotgun became a two-handed great sword that was even heavier.

“Demon winds, you’re weak.” Liam sounded thoroughly disgusted.

“Just spent an hour being tortured,” Conal snapped back, angry shame storming through him. Fucking Siobhan.

“Fine! Here.” Magic burned his hands with cold fire. A heartbeat later, energy roared through his veins, blasting his spent body with a berserker’s strength. “It won’t last, so get to work.”

Yes!” Conal swung the big blade up and charged, glorying in the surge of power, hungry for revenge. He wished he’d had Darkbane when these fuckers gated in, but the magical weapon had been in his bedroom. It might as well have been in New York.

He spun, building momentum, and chopped the sword into the nearest furry back with a triumphant bellow. The wolf screamed and twisted, one clawed hand darting toward Conal’s face. He ducked the swipe, simultaneously twisting the blade and jerking it free. The wolf yelped, high with anguish, and light blazed around him. When the glow vanished, he’d transformed into a timber wolf the size of a pony.

He’d also healed. The wolf whirled to race away, but Conal spun the sword and decapitated him. “Who’s a pussy now, Fido fucker?”

Another pair of yellow eyes flashed in his direction, and that wolf charged. Conal pivoted smoothly aside, swinging the sword two-handed, Derek Jeter going for a homer. The monster tried to dodge, but the blade sank into furry ribs. Howling, Conal levered the weapon up through the werewolf’s torso with all his berserker’s strength. The wolf clawed his forearms, raking furrows Conal barely felt as he twisted the blade free. The monster crumpled in a dying heap.

“Got the heart,” Liam told him. “Good work.”

Conal glanced down at his bloody arms, at his savaged stomach, and the analytical part of his brain wondered how the god was keeping him on his feet.  Then he decided he didn’t give a damn. Helena had done something permanent to one of her last three attackers. The fucker was down on the ground, writhing, beginning to glow. About to transform and heal again. Oh, hell, no.

Conal headed for Helena and her final two foes, swinging Liam at the downed wolf as he passed. Bone crunched, blood flew and the magical glow vanished with the monster’s death.

“You have a nasty streak,” the god observed. “I approve.”

“Five years with Siobhan makes you mean.” He freed the blade with an easy twist of his wrist. Blood pattered on the floor. Fido’s? Eh, could be mine.

One of Helena’s attackers sensed him coming and leaped away. Conal’s sword stroke missed, but a whisker swirled through the air, neatly severed. Liam was sharp. I do love a good blade. Conal coiled, his hands flexing on the sword hilt. The nearest wolf turned to snarl, lips peeled back from fangs the length of daggers.

Conal felt… odd, despite the singing power, almost floating. Blood loss.

“Demon winds, you’re dying on your feet,” Liam said. “Hell with it, let’s shoot him.” In the next instant the sword was a shotgun again. Even as the wolf leaped for him, Conal found the trigger and fired.

The blast as the wolf’s torso exploded knocked Conal off his feet. He lay stunned, vaguely embarrassed.

“You’re done,” Liam told him. “Throw me to Helena.”

But if I do that, I’m going to die, Conal thought muzzily. Oh, fuck it. He managed to sit up even as the world spun. “Helena!” And he threw the shotgun.

She caught Liam out of the air, whirled, and fired, all one smooth motion. As if from a distance, Conal heard the blast as the last wolf’s head exploded.

The world rolled sideways and went out.

* * *

Helena panted, every nerve in her body ablaze with pain. She hadn’t dared shift during the fight, since there were too fucking many of them. And she’d paid the price. She felt like hamburger after a trip through a meat grinder. Probably looked it, too.

Drawing on her magic, she transformed. Human again, she bent, panting as she braced Liam’s shotgun butt on the floor like a cane. God, that’s better. But not by much. The shift had returned her clothing and healed her injuries, but it had done fuck all for the exhaustion of using so much magic on Mortal Earth.

Lifting her head, she looked around for Conal. He lay ten feet away, covered in even more blood than when she’d dived over the balcony rail. Crap. She lifted Liam and hurried toward him. The closer she got, the worse he looked. “Is he still alive?”

“Barely,” Liam growled. “I’m calling Maeve.”

“What about the geas?”

“Siobhan’s cretins are dead, so the spell isn’t in effect.” Thoughtfully, he added, “Conal acquitted himself rather well. Vicious fighter. I’d figured he’d be a pampered little halfer.”

“Racist.” Helena dropped to her knees beside the Changeling. What she could see of his face was paper pale beneath the blood. The werewolves had mauled him like a dog pack. He had bites and raking claw wounds to his chest, belly, face, legs and arms. “How in the hell was he fighting?”

“Berserker spell. Too bad I can’t do that on you.”

“If you could, I wouldn’t be magic resistant, and you’d have killed me by now. Did you call Maeve? He’s covered in blood.”

“I did, and not all of it’s his.”

Conal’s lids lifted and he looked up at her feverishly. They stared at each other for a long, spinning moment. God, his eyes… The violet irises pulled you in, made you want to watch all those shifting shades of blue and purple.

“I’m Helena Baker. Maeve sent me.”

“I know.” A lunatic grin broke across his face. There was blood on his teeth. “Marry me,” he gasped. Then his eyes rolled up, and he passed out.

She blinked down at him, nonplussed.

“Well,” Liam drawled. “He does have good taste, though as proposals do go, that one could have used some work.”

She felt the fireworks burst of an opening dimensional gate. “Conal!” Maeve cried, striding across the room, Essus clinging to one shoulder.

The phoenix eagle’s wings beat in agitation. His feathers were glowing, dangerously close to bursting into flame. “Maeve, he’s dying…”

“Not for long.” Maeve dropped to one knee and extended a hand over the Changeling’s bloody chest. Magic poured from her long fingers.

Helena’s nose stung with the scent of ozone as the Mother of Fairies set to work healing each of the Changeling’s wounds, her swirling power making his entire body glow. “Do you think he’s been infected?” Any human bitten that many times would shortly turn furry. Merlin’s Curse was catching.

Maeve shook her head, bells and charms tinkling in her hair. “No, he has enough Sidhe blood to block the spell.”

“Oh, good.” It would suck for the poor bastard to survive all this, only to die from the Bite. Twenty percent of Direkind didn’t survive their first transformation -- their magic escaped their control and incinerated them. Not that the first shift was a party even for the lucky eighty percent. Helena grimaced, remembering her own.

By the time the Mother sat back on her heels with a sigh of satisfaction, Conal was healed and whole. Even the blood was gone, leaving no sign whatsoever of the horrific torture he’d suffered, beyond those gore-splattered jeans. He was otherwise naked, elegant chiseled torso bare, with long legs, ridiculously broad shoulders and powerful arms -- the kind of body designed for combat and seduction.

He stirred with a groan of relief as his lids fluttered and lifted. His face was as ridiculously beautiful as his body. Thick dark brows drew attention to those arresting violet eyes and the kind of sculpted, aggressively masculine features you usually saw only on busts of Roman generals. Long dark hair spilled around his head, revealing ears that swept into elegant points. Changelings so obviously Sidhe usually employed some magical tatt to keep a human disguise going even while they were asleep or unconscious. Probably that sigil on his left pectoral, judging by the magic it radiated. Being a werewolf, Helena saw him as he was. It was a damn nice view…

Her libido picked that moment to wake up and start rumbling, nipples tightening, heat gathering in her pussy. Oh, shut up. He’s not going to be interested in me. He’s seen my inner Big Bad Wolf.

Healed or not, it took Conal a minute to start tracking. He blinked up at them in confusion, before he sucked in a gasp and jolted into a sitting position, looking wildly around.

“All is well,” Maeve told him, catching a bare shoulder to gently urge him back down before he could leap away. “Those who hurt you are dead, thanks to my wolf.”

“Actually, he got some of them himself,” Helena said. She’d seen him swinging that great sword like Arthur in a snit. “Good job with Liam, by the way.”

When she’d first glimpsed him with the shotgun, her first thought was Oh, shit. Helena was the only one who could handle Liam without risking a self-inflicted bullet. Apparently, the death god had behaved himself -- for once.

Unlike the werewolves. Grimacing, Helena glanced around at the chaos and blood splatter that reminded her too much of her own crime scene. Her stomach lurched, and she quickly returned her attention to Conal.

He was looking around at the carnage with a shell-shocked expression. Probably having a horrific flashback of his own.

Impulsively, she laid a hand on his shoulder. Conal jerked, staring at her before he visibly forced himself to relax and give her a smile. “Sorry. I’m a little jumpy.”

She smiled back, making it as kind as she could. “Don’t worry about it. You’ve had a hell of a day.” But at least you’re not going to turn furry.

Being a monster was nobody’s idea of fun.

 ***

I hope you'll check it out!

Buy Links: Amazon    Apple   Kobo   Changeling Press  (B&N Link coming soon.)