Romance Writers’ Weekly #lovechatwrite
Today we have been asked What is our take on the enemies to lovers trope? How do you make this dynamic feel fresh and believable. I love a good enemies to lovers story. I’ve written a few and they are always fun to write and read. I think the reason they work is because there is usually a significant amount of time that has passed since they were enemies. People change. Especially, as in some of my stories, if they were enemies in high school and are now adults. We all did foolish things when we were young, but hopefully, as we’ve matured, we’ve become better people and may feel bad for the way we treated others. So anyway, the passage of ten, twenty, or more years may make a huge difference in how people relate to each other. I think this is true of not only romantic relationships but also with friendships and family relationships. So never write someone off.
Not hop on over to Brenda Margriet’s blog and see what she thinks at https://www.brendamargriet.com/blog and check out her romance, Crossroads Corner at https://books2read.com/CrossroadsCorner After an embezzling boyfriend puts her under police suspicion and deeply in debt, Camryn Bendixon has one goal—rebuild her career and her self-esteem by dragging her grandfather’s failing construction company back to profitability by her manicured fingernails. She refuses to be distracted by the sexy single dad who stands in her way. Will Danson knows life is meant to be savoured—a fact brought home every time he hugs his young daughter, who lost her sight as an infant. Balancing her needs while managing the booming Kohlenburg Construction Group should make it easy to ignore his disdainful but captivating business rival. Soon Camryn and Will are competing for construction bids and career-making contracts. But it is her battered heart that he truly wants to win.
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