Writing Romance Quotes

Quotes tagged as "writing-romance" Showing 1-8 of 8
Charlotte Bingham
“You can't write any form of fiction unless you enjoy reading it. You must be sincere in your approach. It's no good despising the form. So many people think they could earn some money from writing something for which they have no affection. It won't work. The first thing you have to have is belief.”
Charlotte Bingham

Charlotte Bingham
“Some people are very unfulfilled. In consequence they write passionately good romance because they believe that they could still find happiness. Emily Bronte was not a fulfilled woman but the passion she felt went into Wuthering Heights.”
Charlotte Bingham

Debora Dennis
“Honestly...this is why I write.
I write to get the happy ending I sometimes feel is eluding me.
I write for my sanity.”
Debora Dennis

Julie Tetel Andresen
“A good part of the physical attraction [between the hero and heroine of a romance novel] comes to life during these exchanges as well, since language creates a meeting of the minds. I have long thought that these lines of dialogue carve out the lines of the central love relationship. The dialogue between the hero and heroine creates the central shape of the story. It is the verbal sculpture.”
Julie Tetel Andresen

Susana March
“Me dicidí a escribir literatura del género “rosa” para equilibrar mi presupuesto económico de joven recién casada en los duros tiempos de posguerra española.”
Susana March

Amelia Danver
“Inspiration for My Second Novel, Claiming You in Eden:

I wanted to write an erotic romance novel that is not just about sexual gratification. I thought there are a lot of women readers out there, and I have come to learn a couple of things during my hospital rotations in reproductive and sexual health clinic, psychiatric hospital, and drug and alcohol units that I wanted to share with them. However, I did not want to share it in a dry exposition, say in a self-help book, and I thought of writing erotic romance novels as a way to educate people through a fun, and interesting medium, albeit an unconventional one. So, I finally decided to try my hands on writing contemporary romance, and as it turned out, I found it much easier to write than fantasy novels.”
Amelia Danver, Claiming You in Eden

Edmond Thornfield
“Do we, perchance, comprehend those we hold in affection’s embrace, or by our loving them, it matters not who they are?”
Edmond Thornfield

“Do we, perchance, comprehend those we hold in affection’s embrace, or by our loving them, it matters not who they are?”
Edmond Thornfield, "A Tale of Paris & Paris: Echoes of Troy"