Everything is better with Alan Rickman in it! Right Julie??
They also have it for download to the sony ereader, so I am going to put it on mine. I can’t wait to read this!
The answer to this week’s personal ad is so freaking easy, I’ll be surprised if it lasts more than 3 minutes.
The rules: Gimme the author, title of the book and the name of the heroine in the comments. Don’t, for the love of Jughead, forget the name of the heroine! Because if you do, and somebody else submits it first, then you’re TOTALLY screwed out of our totally awesome prize.
The totally awesome prize: One Smart Bitch aristocratic title.
I’m Deaf, Not Retarded. Bitch.
SWF, unable to hear, so IT TOTALLY DOESN’T MAKE A DIFFERENCE IF YOU SHOUT AT ME AND TALK ALL SLOW BECAUSE I CAN’T HEAR YOU, DUMB ASS. I’m getting a little chubby, though I don’t know why. Anyway, looking for a little lovin’, especially if you’re kind of an uptight guy who learns to open his heart to the wonders of love because I’m so adorable and fey and shit.
It’s the hardest thing, I think, for a writer to wiggle her way out of - what do you do when your character is caught between desiring two different people?
If you write erotica, it’s Ménage à Trois time, baby! But if not, what do you do, knowing that a good portion of your readership might be rooting for the other person once your character makes a choice? I used to read this series of YA novels - Sunfire! That’s what they were called. Thanks Google! - in middle school, the ones where the title was the chick’s name and they were all set against some event of historical significance - the one I remember best was set against the Johnstown Flood in Pennsylvania, which, if you haven’t heard about it, is about the most awful train wreck of an event to hit a town ever. The heroine of these books was almost always caught between two men, but the authors would set up the plot such that you knew the heroine would choose the one who wanted her to be true to herself as opposed to the one who wanted her to conform to existing societal expectations.
But what about triangles that are hard to break? Here are a handful of existing triangles and what I think (and what Candy thinks of the ones she knows about). Feel free to add and offer your opinion!
I noticed that our comment threads often reference fanfic and slashfic in terms of discussing writing, technique, and plot points such as overt and even subtle sexual tension - which is fascinating for me because while I love shows with well-documented cases of unresolved sexual tension, I’ve never read that much fanfic on my own.
So I want to ask: in a romance novel, or a fanfic/slashfic piece, what’s the best method you’ve read yet for establishing unresolved sexual tension? And then resolving it without jumping the shark?
I’m also curious about what factors or plot setups create effective (L) UST: forbidden love like guardian/ward, working partners, or family feud scenarios? Friendship that’s turned into some serious lustful thoughts on one or both sides, but thus risks ruining a very unique relationship?
There are so many examples of “They Did It” just killing the entire reason for watching the show, from Moonlighting to that show with Jamie Lee Curtis, Anything But Love. And then there’s movies based on relationships and unresolved tension, like When Harry Met Sally.
But books? What’s your favorite UST build up?
Here’s a snippet of an e-mail conversation that started out about the weird periodic outages Smart Bitches has been experiencing on the West Coast. It quickly degenerated into… well, you’ll see.
Sarah: I will email Esosoft and ask about the outages. I know I was online yesterday at about 7.40 EDT, which would correspond to 4.40 PDT, and didn’t have a problem, but I wouldn’t bet the farm that the times coincided exactly. Anyway, I’ll email them. Weird, I tell you.
Candy: Heh, I wonder why it’d be OK on the East Coast but not on the West? I’d think it was due to fuckery on my company’s end, except it’s happened to me at home, too, and other Esosoft sites aren’t down.
In other gross news: I just put on my jacket ‘cause the office is motherfucking COLD, y’all. And I think Eric drooled all over it last night because I smell cat spit.
Let me repeat that: I’m at work, and I smell like cat spit.
Sarah: You smell like cat spit? I smell like Oliver love rubbing drool, too, because he rubbed his face all over my sweater and now it smells like him - and has a looooot of orange hairs on it in places I can’t reach. GAH.
Cat spit. Very sexy. I bet Hermes stocks it in eau de parfum.
Candy: Yeah--cat spit is one of the most potent aphrodisiacs in the world. Casanova used liberal applications of it together with oysters and the like to seduce women.
Sarah: I seriously think, to delve into the off-color for a moment, that you need to market yourself with the married woman-cat spit combo. The musk of the illicit with your marital status, coupled with the unmistakable allure of cat spit, and you’ll have to beat the men away from yourself with a stick. A big one.
Candy: To make your off-color comment even more off-color: What kind of a stick? Is it fleshy and throbbing?
Sarah: Hee! Well, it depends on the individual you’re trying to beat off. He might come with his own stick, though!
Candy: Mmmmm, duelling throbbing sticks… Like duelling banjos, only with less creepy, inbred hillbilly idiot savants!
Or so I’d hope, anyway.