Melbourne Romance Writers Guild
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Writing Love Scenes By Sarma Burdeu
*Please note: This article contains adult concepts. Suitable for 18+
Now that romance novels have gone beyond the bedroom door it is acceptable (if not obligatory depending on the line) that your story have one or more love scenes. For some this comes naturally, although I won’t say easily as no writing comes easily. For others it’s a daunting prospect and can lead to sitting in front of a blank screen wondering ‘how do I do this?’ If that’s you then hopefully the following points will help get you going – so to speak.
FOREPLAY
Make time to fantasise. Find time when you’re alone and unlikely to be interrupted, get comfortable and let your imagination take flight. Fantasise as yourself, or one of your characters. Maybe they’ll go places you don’t usually go. Follow them.
Some writers like to create the mood with candles, music, lingerie. Others can be creatively sensual in the midst of day to day household turmoil. Finds what works for you.
· Read ‘how to’ books (about sex I mean, not writing). Read romantica, erotica, or even hard-core porn, non-fiction books on the subject .
· Visit an adult store (on line is quick and convenient). See what’s on offer, what tickles your fancy, what turns you off. If you find something intriguing, research it.
· Many women’s magazines carry all manner of informative articles on sex and sexuality. Back copies in your library will provide an endless source of fascinating information.
· Watch movies (either mainstream or porn) with a detached eye. Take note (either mental or real) of situations, places, actions, reactions. Watch facial expressions, listen to responses. Ok, these are all contrived situations and responses, but then so is your story.
You may never use much of what you discover but you never know when you’ll stumble across that certain ‘something’ that will work perfectly for your stories. It will also make you used to the subject. Any knowledge you gain is never wasted.
GETTING DOWN AND DIRTY
§ To bring life to your love scene requires more than cursory description. You’ve brought us to your characters’ bed (or wherever they are), take the time to see the whole picture.
You can’t HAVE sex without getting ‘up close and personal’. You can’t WRITE love scenes any other way either.
Your readers aren’t just taking a peek around the bedroom door, they have flung it open and are blatantly watching, and they need to get the most out of what they are seeing. Don’t short-change them (your readers and your characters) by only giving them a cursory description.
Be subtle but be explicit. The two work beautifully together.
Stopping ‘to smell the roses’ not only paints a more vivid picture, but can soften the impact of explicit language.
What do they SEE? What do they HEAR? What do the SMELL? What do they TASTE? What do they FEEL?
THE BOTTOM LINE
Write what you want and need to write. You write how you feel, what your characters feel. Let them say, do and think what they need to for who they are. And for who you are.
For more detailed information on Writing Love Scenes for Romance why not sign up for my online workshop or contact me to purchase the Workshop Notes - (http://www.sarmawrites.com/Writing%20Romantica.htm
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