The Art of Romance Writing is an up-to-the-minute practical guide to the romance writing genre, written by the international best-selling author Valerie Parv. Clearcut examples of romance writing show exactly what works, what doesn't and why, unravelling the myth of the formula' and highlighting the subtle differences between the lines put out by major publishers. Step-by-step, Parv explains how to create believable characters, handle dialogue, choose settings, develop workable conflicts and effective plots. There are also invaluable checklists to keep you on track every step of the way.Valerie Parv details marketing information that explains what editors are buying today - from paranormal themes to action-adventure and inspirational, chick lit and mainstream romance. New in this edition is how to sell your book in ten minutes direct to an editor at a writers' conference, where to find opportunities and how to make the most of them. Fully revised and expanded, this new edition will help fulfil every romance writer's dreams.
Valerie Christine Parv was a popular Australian writer of over 70 romance novels, with more than 34 million sales. She published her novels in Mills & Boon's since 1982.
I found this book a little more basic than what I was looking for, but it covers the ground fairly well and would be useful for a writer at an early stage of craft and career.
It does occasionally read as if it were written for someone who hasn't ever read a romance (or a book) but wants to write one... which is, to a reader like me, annoying.
But there are some great craft exercises and break downs of techniques. Worth mining for the good bits.
First written in 1993 and last re-issued in 2004, so virtually all of the "business" side of the information offered is hopelessly out of date--just skim through it.
Since it was written in 2004, it's not as current as I wish it was. But it did give some solid advice on the genre and the varying requirements of various publishing houses. I would love to see an updated version that includes information on e-publishing. All in all, a solid book for beginner writers.
+1 star for explaining a genre I am trying to understand. I also left this completely sure that I could write a traditional romance novel, should the need arise.
First published in 1994 and it shows (even though I read the "fully revised and updated" 2004 version). The basic writing advice is sound (although there were a couple of examples of writing that is now considered overused cliche, but which may well have been fresh and original in 1994). Also, there are a lot of references to now-defunct publishers and even the revised version is too old to mention ebooks or self-publishing. As such, I wouldn't recommend to new writers as they won't know enough to know when they are reading stale or dated advice.
Good little advice book with good suggestions on getting started- the version I read was a bit dated in it's advice as it was published in the 90s and the world of research is vastly different now! But worth a read when just starting out and would like some tips.
This book is definitely outdated now but it gave some interesting perspective about an industry I had zero knowledge about. I was never interested in romance before so it was very interesting to read about the sophisticated systems that romance publishers have to rate romance content and give their readers a fairly sophisticated system in which to be able to choose the level of romance/intimacy they're comfortable with.
There's a number of things I didn't like in this book, like the casual tokenization of minorities and the encouragement to use POC to give your BOOK 'colour' and to make it 'exciting' to readers. Sounds like encouraging fetishization to me, but, as I said, this book is pretty old now and I imagine the insensitivity probably wouldn't pass an editor these days. (I hope)??
3.5 stars - A great introduction to the craft for those who haven't read romance or who haven't written romance before. It had some good reminders in it, but I would definitely suggest this as an introductory book, rather than a craft book for experienced writers. Very readable, open, and approachable with the topic though.