I've been judging romance contest entries again. I have found several mistakes
that I continue to see over and over. Interested in knowing what they are?
Well
Eric
Gordon Big & Tall Jersey , I am only going to cover one in this
article - conflict. I'm not talking about your garden variety arguing, bickering
or fighting. That's not the kind of conflict I'm talking about. I'm talking
about floods, deaths, commitments, fears, love, ambition. The list goes on.
Without conflict life might be easier, but it certainly wouldn't be as
interesting.
Obviously, conflict motivates your characters as well. They have
to have a plan of action but then something gets in their way. Give your
characters strong goals to work on through the book. An author just can't tell a
story about this or that. Let's face it, we all can't be Seinfeld. But even on
that show the characters are going to do something and then an event happened.
The important part to remember is that life doesn't just happen. Head your
characters in a direction and then throw a bucket of water at them.
There are
three main types of conflict you can toss at your characters:
circumstantial
Anthony
Davis Big & Tall Jersey , personal and relationship conflict.
Let's discuss each one:
1. CIRCUMSTANTIAL. What circumstances are your
characters going to be involved in? Are you going to fling them into the path of
a hurricane? Involve them in a car wreck? Maybe their circumstances are of a
personal nature. Maybe a grandfather dies and leaves his granddaughter the
family farm but not without conditions. Maybe your character wants to leave town
but can't because someone is trying to stop him. These circumstances must
disrupt the lives of your characters. It changes their course. It creates
urgency to the situation. It keeps the book moving, and it is usually where the
book begins. Something happens to change the life of your character and the
conflict just continues.
2. PERSONAL. Who doesn't have personal problems?
Your characters should too. You should know your characters inside and out -
their actions, emotions, dreams, past experiences, fears, likes and dislikes.
You might not use every detail in the book, but we are, after all, what we've
experienced in our lives. You need to know what makes all of your characters
tick
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around that makes them who they are. You must figure out what it is that drives
your characters. Fear, love, excitement, greed, or hate?
In most of the
entries I've judged, the characters wander around letting whatever occurs to
them be their life. How often does that happen in real life? Your characters
have to have goals just like we do. For example: Your character has a big
presentation at work. He needs to go to a meeting and persuade his clients to
buy Brand X. If they sign with him, he will get a raise and he will be able to
buy his parent's property out from under his conniving, greedy
brother.
Great! Your character has goals - the presentation, getting to work
on time
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buying the house before his brother. It is then the author's job to put conflict
in his way. For example: His boss forgot to tell him the meeting has been moved
up to tomorrow morning. He spills milk all over the presentation and then the
power goes out before he can reprint it. His annoying neighbor dropped her cell
phone in the toilet so she comes over to borrow his, and he can't get rid of
her. He goes out to his car and it has a flat. He steals a car to get to the
meeting because nothing or no one is going to stop him from pinching his
parent's property out from under his brother.
Whoa! Now you know just what
kind of character you really have. See all that conflict? See all the situations
your character will need to make decisions about? The choices they make will be
affected by the character's beliefs, emotional state and past baggage. This is
the bread and butter of writing. It is all of this conflict that will lead you
down the road to your character's epiphany. Yes, I said epiphany. Yeah, I didn't
know what it was at first either. When your character works through all the
conflict, he will come to some sort of conclusion - an epiphany. In our story,
the character will probably come to the conclusion that it was not worth killing
his brother over.
The main conflict I see missing in the contest entries I've
read is the personal conflict. In our example, it's what made the character so
willing to steal in order to keep the property from his brother. It's that
internal conflict you find going on within yourself over certain issues. Your
character's need it too. Use all five
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experience life.
3. RELATIONSHIP. Is there a person on this planet that
doesn't have issues with at least one other person? Give your characters that
kind of conflict as well. Whether it is a mean villain or the next-door
neighbor, there is always going to be human conflict. In a romance there has to
be a conflict of relationship between the hero and heroine that keeps them from
getting together.
This type of conflict includes: different values, different
ambitions, money, egos, mental issues, prejudices, etc. Here are some more
specific examples: He's a cop and she's been accused of a crime. He's driven by
loyalty to his family but she wants him to give up the family business to live
in Paris as an artist. He's consumed with revenge against the Ewings and she's a
Ewing.
Relationship conflict doesn't just happen in romances. It separates
families, friends
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