By Tanith Davenport (Guest Blogger)
I have a problem that no non-writer can understand. Believe me, I love to write; I love to invent characters and weave storylines around them. But nearly every story I write has a character who is a complete pain in the arse.
Not
to the other characters, I might add. To me. I have a positive genius
for coming up with characters who are a nightmare to write. They will
be so tightly wound that they give me a headache, so secretive that
they never talk about themselves, or so shy and virginal that having
sex with the hero seems an impossibility. And yet I came up with them
myself. I can’t complain, but I do anyway.
In
my first novel I had a hero, Ash, who was a college jock on a
football scholarship, more accustomed to punching a wall than
expressing his feelings. He was a great character, described by one
reader as “a hero to die for”, but his inarticulacy meant he was
a real struggle to write. With him the “meaningful silence”
became something of a mantra – it was all about what he didn’t
say.
My
latest WIP involves a heroine who is quite unbelievably uptight. With
a fierce control over herself and a feeling of righteous anger
against somebody she feels has wronged her, she is unrelentingly
stiff and unbending. It works for the story, but God, writing her is
hard work. Her inner life is quite well developed, primarily because
in dialogue she hardly ever reveals anything, but since she has to
fall in love with the hero, I have to find ways to break down her
walls.
Her
roommate – which is the nearest she has to a best friend in this
particular situation – isn’t much help, since for various
story-based reasons she spends a lot of time sulking. So I resorted
to plan B – alcohol. No better way to make a tightly wound heroine
relax than by getting her drunk, right? At least then maybe she’ll
talk to people instead of being a first-class bitch.
Well,
maybe. But then I’m an erotic romance writer. If I have a heroine
who’s uptight, I need a hero who can loosen her up. If I have an
inarticulate hero, I need a heroine who inspires him to express
himself – within reason, anyway. If Ash had started spouting poetry
I think I’d have collapsed. But this is what we do – we take
characters who play off each other to build chemistry. That’s part
of the fun of being a writer, after all. So my WIP hero is one of
those sexy-yet-arrogant smart-arse types who likes to prod reactions
out of my heroine and make her laugh against her will. Of course,
they both like to be in control in the bedroom, so that will be a
challenge and a half to sort out.
Why
do we make our lives so difficult? Why can’t I just come up with
nice cooperative characters who don’t have all these hang-ups, who
fit together nicely in the sex scenes and who know what to say and
when to say it? Instead I end up with people who can’t talk to each
other properly, while my antagonist runs riot all over the page and
begs for more page time. Yeah, I know you’re fun to write, Bad Guy,
but you’re not allowed to win. I’m busy here – forcing a hero
and a heroine to stop doing weird things and behave themselves.
Maybe
I should stop creating characters from scratch and develop them
according to kinks. I had a great heroine once whose initial
personality trait was a fetish for being drenched in water. As it was
a short story, it was fairly easy to build around that. But for
longer stories I always start with the characters and see where their
kinks form afterwards. It can make for some interesting scenarios,
but also runs the risk of stubborn personalities getting in the way
of my plotting and causing me to bang my head against the desk.
Well,
the hassle my current WIP heroine is giving me has led me to one
conclusion about her sex scenes – I’m going to give her a good
spanking. The amount of grief she’s caused me, she deserves it.
(Funnily enough, a lot of my solutions to this problem involve my
characters’ bottoms. My inarticulate hero became much more
articulate when I had his girlfriend don a strap-on and fuck him in
the arse.) Maybe the experience of lying across the hero’s knee and
letting him discipline her will stop her being such a control freak
and let her enjoy herself for a change.
Or
maybe she’ll finish off the session by leaping on top of him. That
could work too.
At
least my most recent story has a simpler heroine, although she has
problems of her own…
Sleepwalker
Blurb
Tally
Haslam has too much to deal with. A herbalist and aromatherapist, her
latest creation - an aphrodisiac potion - remains in unsaleable
condition as she has nobody to test it with. And, much to her
annoyance, she sleepwalks.
Hoping
to get away from it all for a weekend, Tally travels to nearby
Madigan Hall for their yearly Paranormal Evening—but on the first
night she wakes up outside the bedroom of another guest: Kyle Hunter,
who has chosen to pleasure himself with the door open. Tally escapes
without being seen, but is unable to get Kyle out of her
head—especially when she finds herself at the same table at him the
following evening.
However,
Tally's world is turned upside down when, at the paranormal dinner,
she encounters the ghost of the Blue Lady, who seems determined not
to leave her alone—and shows a disturbing penchant, when Tally
sleepwalks again, for leading her astray…
https://www.totallybound.com/sleepwalker
https://www.totallybound.com/sleepwalker
Excerpt:
As
soon as she opened her eyes, she knew it had happened again.
The
hallway was dark, the only light source a moonbeam that fell through
a nearby window. She felt carpet beneath her bare feet, her silk
nightgown brushing against her ankles. The air was still, cool, and
silent. The building was asleep.
Damn
it. She knew this had been
a bad idea.
A
soft sound behind her made her spin round, her dark hair slapping
against her shoulders. A crack of light glowed at the end of the
corridor—a door had fallen ajar. She could hear something from
within, quiet noises that sparked a memory at the back of her mind.
Tally
turned on the spot and looked around her. The place was familiar, and
she bit her lip in frustration. Her room was near here, but there was
no avoiding it—she would have to pass the open door.
A
metal object knocked against her ankle as she moved, and relief
flooded through her. At least she still had her room key. As quietly
as possible she made her way down the corridor, pressing close to the
opposite wall as the open door drew nearer.
What
is that noise? Is that...?
The
urge to glance through the doorway was irresistible as she passed. A
figure was visible, and she paused—
And
froze.
The
first thing she saw on the bed were a pair of feet, splayed to reveal
tanned legs leading up to a muscular, naked male body. Dark hair
spread on the pillow and, lower, drew a happy trail from a defined
chest down, down, down to the hollow of his groin, from which rose a
solid erection wrapped in one firm hand. His face was barely visible,
but what she could see was twisted in a rictus of pleasure as his
hand glided up and down, up and down, up and -
Oh
God!
Tally
knew she should go, but her body remained inextricably pressed
against the wall, her gaze fixed on the vision in front of her. She
tightened her fingers in the folds of her nightgown, breathless,
conscious of the heat growing in her gut and the wetness slowly
building in her centre.
The
gasps from the room gradually became deep, masculine moans. She could
see the muscles in his thighs flexing, see the heavy mass of his
balls tightening. He was close, very close, and warmth bloomed within
her as she watched, all thought gone from her mind except the sight
of his pleasure, the rounded curves of his arse, the jerking of his
hips as his hand moved faster, faster—
Then
he groaned, spasmed, and spurted his release high, droplets
spattering his chest. Tally closed her eyes in sympathy, struggling
to control her breathing.
If
she left now, he might not hear her. She turned and bolted down the
corridor, running on her tiptoes, hastily scanning the darkened space
for the turning that led to her own room.
This
could not
happen again.
About Me
I
have been writing for ten years and first got into erotic romance
through the Romantic Novelists' Association New Writer's Scheme; they
critiqued my debut novel "The Hand He Dealt", which was
published in June 2011 and was nominated for the Joan Hessayon Award.
I
live in Yorkshire with my husband and two extremely bratty tuxedo
cats. When I'm not writing I spend my time watching horror movies,
listening to rock music, travelling to new places and trying out new
restaurants.
Find me at:
4 comments:
Thanks for having me on here!
Hey, Tanith!
Thanks for being my guest.
You're right, there's nothing like a good spanking to get a character to shape up!
Good luck with the book.
I share your frustration, Tanith! I always get the difficult ones, too. They bug me incessantly until I get it right!
Sounds like an intriguing story. Love the cover too!
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