I came across this problem last week. I’m not talking about the main conflict of the story, of course. That would mean I’d completed the story in eight chapters. Trust me, it’s not close.
No, but no novel (or very, very few) lives on a single conflict. There are always others–internal conflicts between mutually exclusive desires or fears. Conflicts between characters, even when they’re on the same side in the larger conflict. Sub plots. A dozen other kinds of conflict that enrich the story.
And I acknowledge that I have a problem. I have a desire to end a particular kind of conflict too early. It’s the conflict between my two romantic leads. I have no problem stringing this out before they come together. It’s after they’ve become a couple that I tend to want to smooth over their little differences. I want them to be happy together. But the course of true love never does run smooth–certainly not in fiction.
BLOOD IS THICKER is the sequel to my paranormal romance BLOOD WILL TELL. The central conflict hits very close to newly-weds Rolf and Valeriah. And there’s a conflict between them in how to deal with it. Rolf wants to run around trying to fix it (typical male). Valeriah is driven to protect . . . well, you’ll just have to wait and read it to find out what she wants to protect. Can’t give too much away. (Besides, it’d take too much backstory to explain in this post.)
Rolf is basically clueless and occasionally puzzled by Valeriah’s reaction. For Vallie, it’s a sort of hot and cold conflict. Sometimes she’s really pissed off with Rolf. (And she’s half werewolf. You really don’t want to make her mad.) Other times, she’s merely annoyed. Which, of course, only makes Rolf more confused. He’s trying to be strong for her and she’s reading it as detached.
I had the scene in my head where Rolf finally gets it and they get back on track. So, I wrote it. Nothing wrong with that. But I’d only gotten a couple of chapters further before I realized my mistake. It’s a good scene. I’m going to keep it. It just can’t happen for about a dozen more chapters, bringing them back solidly together just before the climax.
So, I’ve spent the last few days redoing chapters 7 thru 9. I don’t usually allow myself to go back during a first draft. I try to make the first draft forward only and keep the infernal internal editor switched off. But when it’s a conflict I need to pull forward in the story, well, I didn’t think I had any choice.
Even better, this conflict allows me to draw two characters closer together and set up a separate conflict which will probably continue even when the first is resolved. Don’t you love it when that happens?
Back on track, now and almost done with chapter 10.
In other news, Rebekah Loper has passed on a couple of blog awards to me.
The Blog on Fire award, which requires me to share seven (more) facts about myself and pass it on.
And the 7 x 7 Link Award, which requires me to choose one of my posts in each of seven different categories and then pass the award along.
Thank you, Rebekah. I’ll be taking care of the requirements in my next blog post.
Interesting problem and probably one a lot of writers have ran into. However, and I might be misreading what you mean, but I think they can be happy and have problems at the same time. You’re right no relationships, especially fictional in Romance, are free from conflicts but at the same time conflicts can be a time to grow together.
And it may not matter here or may even be done on purpose but I find their problems to be cliche-ish and/or stereotypical. Of course it’s a stereotype that happens to happen a lot. 🙂 But try to make him not too thickheaded. Or her to defensive.
As to her temper and being half werewolf. Isn’t he full Wolf? Boy if they ever got into a heavy fight… well, talk about the fur flying.
Could you explain those awards a bit more, unless that link explains them fully. You did some but I still get the feeling that you’re talking like we should know something about them already. Of course that could be just me.
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You’re right, they’re kind of cliche problems stated baldly. It’s how they play out in the story that hopefully makes them more than that. And it’s just a side conflict, not the main one. But it’s one I need to keep alive a bit longer.
No, Rolf’s not a wolf, he’s a dragon. Even Vallie would be out of her league fighting against him. Which doesn’t mean she won’t get her licks in.
Tomorrow’s post will be about the awards.
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Oops, should have remembered that.
So I guess it would be fur and scales flying. 🙂
Hmm, now that would make a great title. Of course a story with that title could go a number of ways, including humorous. Or a child’s story.
And you’re right about how the problems are written and play out. Your story within a story will probably be good.
A side note:
And I noticed when I put in my E-mail address in the space for it one of those news codes appears. So someone can use a smartphone without typing out my address? Never had one of those codes connected to my name before. 🙂
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