Irrecovability

By Kris Kennedy

The thing that can’t be undone. Ringing the bell that can’t be unrung. It means you’re committed. In for the long haul. The act, however unconsidered it was at the start, is now binding.

I believe this is one of the things we seek in our stories. Oh, it’s among other things, of course. But one of the reasons great fiction moves us is because we see characters doing things that we ourselves often back away from: being irrevocable. Doing the thing that can’t be undone.

For good or ill, that’s one of the most exciting parts of reading—and writing—fiction.

It’s part of the reason why the characters in novels don’t do the mundane tasks of their lives on stage. Things like cleaning the house don’t matter, in terms of Story. (Did you hear that? Just tell your family cleaning the toilet doesn’t have a fundamental turning point within, so you’re giving it up.) Most of the mundane tasks of daily life are revocable. Nothing ‘turns’ on them. You could take them back, and no one would know or care. Nothing is fundamentally different as a result. They’re forgettable.

They never make a difference.

(In fact, cleaning is the the antithesis of irrevocable. At least in my house.)

You can walk away from a clean OR a dirty toilet. That is…unless you found a diamond ring resting there, after you’d pushed back the hair from your sweaty forehead with a forearm and knelt to scrub your 20th toilet of the week. And then you saw it. Sparkling. A diamond ring. Diamond rings don’t grow in toilet bowls, so that means someone lost it. Or tossed it. And you found it. And your rent is a month overdue.

NOW you have a story. Now you have a protagonist. Someone with a choice to make.

Make the right ones and you have a hero. Or a heroine.

In all our ‘keeper’ books, one of the things we generally find is characters actively getting themselves deeper and deeper into worse and worse trouble, particularly with the hero/heroine, and there’s simply no backing out. Nothing they do can be reversed.

Sometimes this is hard for us as authors. We like our heroes and heroines. We know their histories, their full potential and their pathetic pitfalls. We love them. Or at least really like them.

In any event, we want them to have a happy life. We don’t want them to be thrown to the wolves. To feel despair. To have Dark Nights of the Soul. To say ‘no’ when it’d be safer to say ‘okay, fine.’ To walk the plank. To face the witch in her very own castle, surrounded by guards, with nothing but a scarecrow to protect them.

But we’ll do it.

For you, the reader.

Because in the end, we’re storytellers. We know heroes and heroines have to walk through the fire. Happy, easy things happening to nice, good people, all of which can be taken back at the first sign of discomfort, is not drama.

Drama means conflict. And that means being committed. Doing, at least once, something that cannot be undone, ever.

Check out the books on your ‘keeper’ shelves. I’ll bet you can find at places the characters made irrevocable, un-take-back-able choices. Decisions that, even if done in the spur of the moment—especially if done in the spur of the moment—pushed them closer to the dark edge of What They Known, then straight off the cliff, into peril and danger and their own worst fears. Right in the other person’s arms.

Come share a moment of irrevocable choice in a book you’re reading or have read. A classic or an unknown. And to the writers out there, how about from a story you’re writing? Why does that moment feel powerful to you, as the reader? What is irrevocably different after that choice, and why do you think it makes the story better?

Or, if you could re-write a scene from a story you’ve read, to include an irrevocable choice, what would it be? Something they can’t take back, and will change everything to come after.

I’m giving away a copy of my latest release, THE IRISH WARRIOR, to someone who gives a great example of irrevocability in romance fiction!!

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Please leave a comment to enter to win THE IRISH WARRIOR. If you’re reading this blog through a feed at Facebook, Goodreads or another social network, please note you need to leave your comment at www.museinterrupted.com to enter.

Kris Kennedy Guest Blogs Tomorrow!

Tomorrow I’ll welcome historical romance author Kris Kennedy to the blog. Join us for your chance to win Kris’s June 2010 Kensington Publishing release, THE IRISH WARRIOR, which won the 2008 Golden Heart® Award for Best Historical Romance.

About THE IRISH WARRIOR:

Ireland, 1295

Inhibited, accountant-minded Senna de Valery comes to Ireland to finalize a deal that will save her faltering wool business. What she gets instead is a cunning English lord with dangerous ulterior motives.

Forced to rely on her wits, not her ledgers, Senna frees an Irish warrior chained in the prisons, and together they flee across the war-torn land of medieval Ireland. But Finian O’Melaghlin is much more than a charming, roguish warrior. He is councilor to his king, on a grave mission to recover military secrets, and has a dangerous agenda of his own.

Neither is prepared for the powerful forces arrayed against them…

Neither can resist the fiery passion igniting between them…

Neither can imagine the sacrifices they will face, nor the choices they will be forced to make…

King and outlaws, weapons and war: Can love indeed triumph over all?

About Kris:

Wife, mom and psychotherapist Kris Kennedy left behind the office for the wilds of medieval England and Ireland. She still spends time trying to tame the wilds of her kitchen and laundry room, but whenever she can drag herself away from that excitement, she writes sexy, adventure-filled historical romances. Her most recent release, THE IRISH WARRIOR, won RWA’s prestigious Golden Heart® Award for Best Historical Romance in 2008 and released June, 2010 from Kensington. Her next book, DEFIANT, comes out May 2011 from Pocket Books.

To learn more about Kris and her books, please visit her website.

Series Romance: The Harlequin American Reading Experience

By Marin Thomas

Ask the Senior Editor of Harlequin American Romance, Kathleen Scheibling, and she’ll say, “Two things that each and every American Romance has are a sense of family and community, and a sense of place. In American Romance we’re painting a picture of American life as it could be. Full of family, friends and happiness.”  

Ask any reader of the Harlequin American Romance line and they’ll say things like…fast-paced with heroines and heroes the reader can relate to. Fans of the line will tell you that no two books are the same so expect the unexpected when you pick up an American Romance.

American Romance strives to reflect the everyday life of men and women who are working, raising families and searching for the American dream. Americans can vary in tone but, whether the book is light-hearted, humorous or thought-provoking you’ll always get a fast-paced read and an uplifting reading experience.   

The heroes in American Romance come from all walks of life. Bad boys, businessmen, firefighters, policemen, military men, ranchers and a reader favorite—cowboys. Our readers just love a hero who wears Wranglers, boots, a Stetson and says, “yes, ma’am”.    

Secondary characters play a distinct role in American Romance. We use these characters to help advance the relationship between our hero and heroine. After reading an American Romance don’t be surprised if you not only remember the hero and heroine but also one of the quirky secondary characters.    

American Romance is unique in that our authors explore a variety of settings across the United States. Whether it’s a small town out West, a borough of New York City, or downtown Detroit—the details of the setting and the characters which live there will draw the reader more deeply into the story. The setting helps define our characters and usually plays a major role in their lives.  

Family plays an important part in American Romance. You’ll find babies, teenagers, small children and even extended family members in our books. Whether the hero is the boy-next-door, a hot-shot business executive or a down-on-his-luck rodeo cowboy, they’ll have a soft spot for babies, children and teens.

For those of you who love Cowboys—you’ll find plenty to pick from the line each month. This past June Harlequin American Romance launched its first-ever six-book miniseries. The Codys: First Family of Rodeo debuted with Rebecca Winters’ book, Walker: The Rodeo Legend. Book 2, DEXTER: HONORABLE COWBOY is out this month. The series runs from June through November. 

If you’re still craving more cowboys…the authors of The Codys: First Family of Rodeo post a new “cowboy blog” every Wednesday at  http://firstfamilyofrodeo.blogspot.com/ 

Are you a fan of cowboys—if so what do you find so addicting about cowboy heroes in romance novels?

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Please leave a comment or question for Marin to enter to win DEXTER: HONORABLE COWBOY. If you’re reading this blog through a feed at Facebook, Goodreads or another social network, please note that you need to leave your comment at www.museinterrupted.com to enter.

Marin’s latest book for Harlequin American Romance is out in stores this month. DEXTER: HONORABLE COWBOY (July 2010) received a 4.5 Star  Top Pick from Romantic Times magazine. You can learn more about Marin and her books at www.marinthomas.com. To read Marin’s bio and the back cover copy for DEXTER: HONORABLE COWBOY, please see yesterday’s post.

Marin Thomas Guest Blogs Tomorrow!

Yes, I’ll return to posting about Peru. Look for a new Peru post this Wednesday. But, first, let me entice you to visit tomorrow and meet my pal, Harlequin American Romance author Marin Thomas. Marin is blogging about the Harlequin American Romance line and how it differs from other “home and hearth” category lines at Harlequin/Silhouette. Here’s your chance to pick the brain of a successful American Romance author—whether you’re a writer or a reader. Marin would love to hear from both!

Every person who leaves a comment at Marin’s blog tomorrow will enter to win a copy of her latest American Romance, DEXTER: HONORABLE COWBOY. Please leave your comment on tomorrow’s post to enter. If you’re reading this post through a feed at Goodreads, Facebook or another social network, please note that you need to visit www.museinterrupted.com to enter.

Without further ado…!

About DEXTER: HONORABLE COWBOY

The Codys: First Family of Rodeo Mini-Series

For This Cowboy, Family Comes First

Josie Charles was back in town, and Dexter Cody desired her as much as ever. She was his twin brother’s girl, but it was hard to act honorable when all he wanted was to stake his claim on the woman and her boy. Sooner or later, his brother was going to step up and do the right thing. And when that time came, would Dexter be able to step aside and lose Josie all over again?

No way was Josie losing her heart to the sexy-as-all-get-out rancher. The last thing the single mother needed was another Cody messing with her life. But her high school pal had sure grown into one fine-looking cowboy. Caring. Hardworking. Responsible. Exactly the kind of man she’d want to be a father to her son.

Which one is the right brother? Looks as if there’s going to be a showdown…

About Marin:

Marin grew up in the Midwest town of Janesville, Wisconsin. She attended the University of Arizona in Tucson on a Division l basketball scholarship. In 1986 she graduated with a B.A. in radio-television and married her college sweetheart in a five-minute ceremony in Las Vegas.  Marin was inducted in May 2005 into the Janesville Sports Hall of Fame for her basketball accomplishments.

Even though she now calls Chicago home, she’s a living testament to the old adage “You can take the girl out of the small town but you can’t take the small town out of the girl.” Marin’s heart still lies in small-town life, which she loves to write about in her books.

To learn more about Marin and her books, please visit her website.

See you tomorrow!

Confessions of a Contest Judge–WTF Was She Thinking When She Judged My Entry?

By Susan Gable

In trying to come up with a topic for this blog that might appeal to a variety of folks, I stumbled onto the idea that maybe writers out there who enter contests might wonder what sometimes goes through a judge’s mind as they’re reading.  (I know more than once I said, “WTF?  What the HELL were you thinking?” when I got back MY contest entries and score sheets.  LOL.  I don’t know if I can actually answer those types of questions relating to contest judges, but maybe I can provide some insight into what I’m sometimes thinking.)

When it comes right down to it, it’s all about the characters and the stories for me.  It’s really easy to judge the still-wet-behind-the-ears entries, the ones that head-hop, or tell and never show, or don’t know what a paragraph is. (No kidding, I once read an entry that was a 25 page paragraph.  No paragraph breaks at all.  That was painful to read.)  Grammar and punctuation are our friends.

Once the craft basics are mastered, we get into the areas that are harder to define.  (“It just didn’t work for me” is an excuse an editor/agent can use, but someone judging a contest has to be a lot more helpful than that.)

You do have to grab me in the first page or two.  Show me an interesting set up.  Show me conflict, or clue me in to the POTENTIAL for conflict.  Let me know there’s a secret here. My new book, THE FAMILY PLAN, opens with my heroine showing up on the hero(whom she’s never met)’s doorstep on a secret mission of some sort.  And right on the first page of the story, you find out she doesn’t think men are reliable.  Conflict alert!  On the next page, you see she wants to get what she came for (which turns out to be his sperm <G>) and get the hell out of dodge.  Interesting character, situation that makes me ask questions – what’s she up to? What does she want? And the possibility of conflict with the hero. ‘ Cause of course you know he’s not going to want to give her what she wants.

Another thing I run into a lot in contest entries is characters behaving badly.  And by that I mean, not logically, not consistent with what we know about “real” people.  If you motivate it right, I’ll follow you and your characters anywhere.  But if you don’t…you’re going to lose me when you have your characters behaving stupidly.  You know, in the horror movies the woman goes into the creepy, dark basement wearing just her underwear and carrying a teddy bear for protection?   Don’t do that!  Make her put on her clothes, grab a weapon of some sort, and MOTIVATE her actions – if she’s going down there just because she heard a noise, she’s TSTL and deserves to get chopped up by Freddy.  If she’s going down there because her sister/mother/father/best friend went down there, and she’s worried about said friend…now I’m with you.

But that applies to minor things, too.  Common sense applies.  Don’t have someone put a candy in an unconscious person’s mouth.  Don’t make your hero run on a broken leg. (Unless you SHOW me something compelling to make it believable – as in, splint it or something — and he’s got good motivation.  Trying to stay alive is usually good motivation. <G>)  Don’t have your characters be ignorant of something they should reasonably know about. 

You need to know and understand your characters well enough to know what “normal” behavior is for them.  Cops are suspicious by nature, as are the fathers of teenage girls.  Hair-stylists are going to notice everyone’s hair.  A character who is a chef (like the hero in my upcoming book) is going to get really annoyed with you if you order food delivered to his restaurant/home from another restaurant.  Migraines don’t vanish like magic.  Characters holding the leashes of dogs copulating in the bushes will know something is going on with their animals.  A medical person on the verge of escaping from her kidnappers probably wouldn’t stop on her way out the door to blow up the whole house and kill all the drug dealers passed out in the place.  If your heroine shot the hero, chances are he’s going to hold a grudge for a really long time.

Everything has to make sense.  As I said, if you motivate it properly, I will stick with you.  But if it feels like you’re having certain things happen just because it suits your story, or it’s cute, and you haven’t really thought about it… THINK about it!  If you find yourself trying to explain character behavior in the paragraph, that’s often a sign they’re doing something that deep down, you know they shouldn’t be.  And you’re taking the easy way out.

Judges, like editors and agents, also have their own personal “ick” factors, or things that just rub them the wrong way.  We’re all human. Readers are human, too.  Sometimes you get irate fan mail because you touched a nerve in a reader.  When I’m judging an entry, I try really hard not to let my own personal ick factors get in the way of my judging.  Not all judges do that, though.  Some of them will knock you down on the score because you dared to have a heroine drop an f-bomb. (Or whatever taboo you broke.)  Often I will point it out, especially if I think it’s a marketing issue.  (Dear writer, you’ve entered this ms as an Inspirational book, and your heroine is dropping f-bombs all over the place.  Though it does seem to suit her character, you might want to rethink it — the inspirational publishers/lines aren’t going to be happy with it.)

Remember that characters should grow and change over the course of a book.  They should learn something.  So they certainly don’t have to be perfect at the beginning.  (Or ever!)  Perfect characters are boring!  Plus…nobody’s perfect.

In the end, try to remember that judging a contest, like all reading experiences, is subjective!  What annoys the snot out of one person is perfectly fine with another.  This gets you ready for reader reactions.  Judges are only human.  We invest a lot of time in judging contest entries.  (Most of us do, anyway.)  It’s okay to be mad, sad, etc. when you read the comments.  But come back to the comments later, after the sting has worn off, and take another look.  Is there anything the judge said that might make the story better?  Believe me, when I got some of my contest results back, I cried.  And when I got my first set of line edits, I cried.  LOL.  So, it’s all part of the process.  Making anything, including a story, stronger, is never an easy process.

Do you have any contest questions?  Stories of judging horror? (I try never to be mean when I judge, but I do tend to be somewhat blunt, and that probably puts off some people.)  Any other writing questions that maybe I can answer?

What’s your favorite writing contest and why?

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Leave a comment or question for Susan to enter to win THE FAMILY PLAN. If you’re reading this post through a feed on Facebook, Goodreads, or another social network, please visit the comment trail at www.museinterrupted.com to be eligible for the draw.

To read Susan’s bio and the story blurb for THE FAMILY PLAN, see yesterday’s post. To learn more about Susan and her books, please visit www.susangable.com.

Susan Gable Guest Blogs Tomorrow!

I’ll return to posting about my Peru trip on Wednesday. Today and tomorrow are devoted to RITA-nominated Harlequin Superromance author Susan Gable. It’s been awhile since I hosted a guest blogger, so please drop by and make Susan feel welcome. Susan’s blogging about contest judging, providing a judge’s perspective on those comments that might leave a writer shaking her head in confusion. Susan’s also giving away a copy of her July Superromance, THE FAMILY PLAN. THE FAMILY PLAN is available now on eHarlequin and in bookstores July 13th.

Anyone who posts to the Comment trail tomorrow, Tuesday, June 29th, will enter to win the drawing for Susan’s book. Please note if you’re reading this on Facebook or another social network, only comments entered at www.museinterrupted.com are eligible for the draw.

About THE FAMILY PLAN:

Dr. Amelia Young has meticulously organized her family plan. Wonderful daughter? Done. Man? Unnecessary. All Amelia has ever needed is carefully selected DNA. So what if the donor turns out to be a ridiculously hot chef with a distracting butt and wicked smile? That only proves she had good taste in genes.

Anonymously donating his DNA at a clinic when he was a student is one thing. A strange woman at his door requesting a second deposit is quite another. But when Finn Hawkins realizes Amelia needs another child to save her first—his first—he relents. And when that first kid turns up on his doorstep a few months later, he’s in this family deep!

About Susan:

Susan Gable has sold seven books to Harlequin’s Superromance line. Her books have been Rita and Golden Heart Finalists, she’s been a Waldenbooks Bestseller, been three times nominated for Romantic Time’s Best Superromance of the Year, and she’s won numerous other awards, including the National Readers’ Choice Award. Her new book, THE FAMILY PLAN, got 4.5 Stars from RT. It hits shelves on July 13th, and is a savior sibling story – the story of a mom who will do just about to save her child’s life. In the process she learns that depending on others makes you stronger, not weaker. To read the first chapter, visit Susan’s website: www.SusanGable.com