Showing posts with label Pleasure Pregnancy and a Proposition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pleasure Pregnancy and a Proposition. Show all posts

Thursday, 10 December 2020

Exploring Romance Tropes: Accidental Pregnancies, oh my!


The second in my intermittent series of blogs for romance writers on romance tropes is a chance to muse on the strengths (and weaknesses) of one of my favourite – and most used – tropes... I mean, I've used the old accidentally 'up the duff' plot hook rather a lot and it's the big draw of my two bestselling books: Pleasure, Pregnancy and a Proposition, and One Night So Pregnant (gotta love those insane titles, right!!)! So I feel I'm a bit of an expert on its strengths and weaknesses...

What's interesting about both of those books - apart from the fact that the accidental pregnancy trope features VERY strongly in the titles (which probably explains why they're bestsellers TBH) - is that in both books I open the story with the shock reveal of the accidental pregnancy itself, not the lead up to it (ie: the scenes in which the couple got up the duff in the first place!). 

In my fourth published book, Pleasure Pregnancy and a Proposition, I also turned things on their head a little by contriving to have it be the heroine who is unaware of the pregnancy not the hero. Say what now?! How the heck does that work, you're probably thinking... Basically, in the opening scene of the book, I have my hero turn up at the heroine's work and demand she take a pregnancy test. She doesn't know she's pregnant, but he's been clued into her symptoms by a mutual friend, knows they had unprotected sex and thinks – given the acrimonious way their one night together ended – that she does know and she's deliberately keeping the truth from him... I did get quite a few critical comments not just because of the hero's totally overbearing behaviour in that opening scene – he literally carts her out of her office and marches her to a Harley Street Clinic to get the test which she is convinced will be negative - but also because some readers thought it was impossible for a woman to be three months pregnant and not have figured it out. Fair enough, getting the reader to suspend their disbelief is the author's job and maybe for those readers I didn't do the job well enough. That said, I did quite a lot of research about whether or not it is physically possible – of course it is! – but more importantly I made sure my characters' motivations also worked to make it more believable, that my heroine would be in denial about her symptoms and my hero would be very angry if he thought she was keeping the truth of her pregnancy from him. 

My hero's motivation to explain his overbearing behaviour also drives a lot of the developing conflict in the rest of the story... As my heroine struggles to come to terms with the fact that she is pregnant with this man's child, while he pressures her into agreeing to marry him... 

So, why is it that he is so outraged that the heroine might not have told him about her pregnancy? Basically, he had been born illegitimate himself - the son of a Vegas showgirl and a British Lord (well this is a Mills and Boon book, folks!) - who was grudgingly 'taken in' by his father after his mother's death when he was still a child because he was the man's only biological child. He had been made to feel ever since by his father, that the circumstances of his birth and his illegitimacy made him less than. That he was essentially unworthy and unloveable because of it, treated with distain by his father and ensconced in a series of British boarding schools until he came of age. As a result of that lonely and emotionally barren upbringing, he had never wanted to have children, but when he thinks the heroine is pregnant, he is determined that no child of his will be born illegitimate, that they will always be acknowledged by him. What he doesn't realise of course, until later in the book - and with a lot of help from my smart and reckless and compassionate heroine – is that acknowledgement is not enough, that having your father's name is not the same as having your father's love. In short, at the start of the book, the hero is convinced he has none of the tools to love this child, and TBH he really doesn't want them, because to open himself up to those kind of emotions will leave him as vulnerable as he was when he was a child after his mother's death... Luckily for him, the heroine – once she has accepted she is pregnant with this man's child and decides she wants to have it, and that she can love it, despite the fact she thinks its father is an overbearing jerk! – does have the tools not just to love this child, but to show its father that she will accept nothing less from him than love too if he wants to marry her. Of course, after that rather contentious beginning, they both have a long way to go before they can get to like, let alone love... But luckily a skinny dipping scene and a few weeks at his manor house in Wiltshire helps with that!! 

So, anyway, that's the book's essential conflict: the hero insisting on marriage – because he wants to find a way to do the right thing by his child without actually engaging emotions he thinks he is not capable of showing –  and the heroine refusing to marry him – until he proves to her that he has the capacity for love, not just for the child, but also for her...

And rather neatly, that conflict perfectly illustrates what makes the accidental pregnancy trope so compelling as it cleverly combines external and internal conflicts in the hook... Because what is essentially an external conflict - ie: the accidental pregnancy itself – immediately creates lots of delicious internal conflicts while also raising the stakes exponentially in a relationship by introducing the prospect of unplanned parenthood... 

Instantly you have so many delicious questions to ask your characters. How do they feel about having children? What were their own childhoods like? Have they been given the tools to deal with this shocking accident (hopefully not!!)? Or will they need to embark on a journey of huge emotional growth to deal with this situation (hopefully yes)? How will that conflict play out?And what of the ongoing relationship? If it's a one-night stand pregnancy - which I particularly prefer, because the less the couple know each other, the more the stakes are raised! - those questions will become more urgent but also potentially more contentious as the couple struggle to align on what to do next, not just about the pregnancy but also about their relationship... And we hope will have to dig deep into their own psyches and confront difficult questions about themselves and that relationship before they can even consider becoming parents...

So, what are the weaknesses/potential problems for a writer when using the accidental pregnancy trope? 

Well, while this will very much depend on the type of romance you're writing - ie, is it high romantic fantasy, or more gritty and realistic, is it a historical romance or a contemporary one, etc. For me, one of the biggest difficulties, even when writing high romantic fantasy, is making an accidental pregnancy entirely believable in this day and age, given all the possible avenues your couple will have to sort the problem out without ever having to answer any of those questions... Not gonna lie, the very low failure rate on most forms of contraception these days has caused me no end of problems when it comes to making this trope fly!! And don't even get me started on the morning after pill...

Finally there is also the question of termination... I always include a conversation in my narrative which indicates that a conscious choice has been made to have the baby. Although this question too can lead to lots of interesting conflicts... I once came up with the idea for one of my longer novels - So Now You're Back - based on one simple question: how does a man deal with an accidental pregnancy if he does not have the right to chose whether or not to become a father? 

Of course there have been some terrific romance books written where the choice was made not to have the baby, and I applaud those writers for tackling what was once a taboo subject in romance and really shouldn't be IMHO - not because everyone has to agree with a woman's right to choose, but simply because it is an experience that many women go through, and I don't think it should be taboo in romance for that reason. Abortion is an extremely polarising and also emotive subject and how we react to it as readers as well as writers will most likely come from our own believe systems as much as those of the characters we create, but I feel it's important that romance novels reflect the full gamut of human experience. That said, when employing the accidental pregnancy trope, of course one of the main aspects of the trope that makes it appealing to readers is that it introduces the prospect of parenthood to your couple. So can it work, if the decision is made not to have the child? Or does it become a different trope entirely?

Obviously these are all just my opinions, about the trope and the choices I make when using it in a novel, but I'd love to hear from other writers (and readers).... Do you love the trope, too? If so, why do you? Do you find it problematic? Are there elements of it that you struggle with, etc.


BTW if you're an aspiring romance author and want to learn more about romance writing from a USA Today bestselling author, I tutor a 7-week online course for the Professional Writing Academy in which we learn about subjects such as Creating Convincing Protagonists, Plotting a Romance, Crafting Effective Dialogue and Writing Compelling Scenes of Intimacy. My next run of the course kicks off on 22nd February 2021 and the early bird offer is available until 21st January.

Tuesday, 20 December 2011

Heidi's Top 10 Tips for a Happy Writing Xmas and New Year!

Hey all

Just wanted to say have a fantastic Christmas... I've illustrated this post with some Christmassy pics I took on my cycle ride home last night, so hope you enjoy them. Wish that amazing house was mine!

And as a special Christmas treat it occurred to me that On the First Night of Christmas is my tenth published book. As readers to this blog will know, I'm currently being tortured by my latest manuscript which was all a bit of a dog's breakfast until I had a long chat with my editor on Friday afternoon. I'm now clear about what needs to be cut (namely about 20K of the 30K I've written!), what needs to be changed (thou hero shall not be a complete git!) and what needs to be finessed (more fun, more flirt, much less fraught)...

So I've put some top tips together for happier writing in the New Year compiled from what I've learned while struggling with this book and others before it...

1). Every Book Is Different: Sounds obvious, but remember unless you're constantly writing the same story, every book will vary according to how easy or how hard it is to write, the important thing is to do whatever is necessary and not stress too much when you hit a roadblock (or several hundred).

2) Beware of the Convenient Plot Twist: Yes, your story will have turning points, but be very wary of a plot twist which conveniently brings your couple together (like a flash fire that burns down your heroine's house and means she has to move in with the hero) or keeps them apart (like a misunderstanding that could be sorted out with a proper conversation) because it may be a substitute for a decent conflict.

3). Make Your Characters Work for Their HEA: This is really an extension of 3, but make sure your characters are both having to grow and change during the course of their story so they deserve to be happy at the end, otherwise your reader will get bored, or worse want to murder them both! Or even worse, you will...

4). A Good Editor's Not Just for Christmas: Published authors have the huge luxury of an editor. Some of my books have had very little editorial input, but others would simply never have reached publishable quality without that essential feedback and advice... So if you're unpubbed, seek out constructive feedback wherever you can, and use it.

5). You're the Only One Who Knows What's Right for Your Story: Sort of sounds like a contradiction of 4 I know, but bear with me here, folks... Basically, you are the creator of your story and those characters and if you lose sight of that, your story will lose it's integrity not to mention it's unique you-ness, so while constructive criticism is important, don't be scared to ignore it, when necessary.

6). Be True to Your Process, No Matter How Naff It Is: It's a constant pain in my backside that my process is very hit and miss, and will often involve re-writing scenes until I get it right. This is because I'm a pantser and I tend to try out reactions for my characters to a particular situation until I know it's the right one. And it's only when the characters are fully formed and understood (usually once the book is written, how useless is that!) that I will know instinctively how they react. But that's just me, I've tried to change it and my writing loses it's spontaneity and integrity as a result... So basically I'm stuck with this naff process... And I'm one with it (she says through gritted teeth)!

7). Don't be Afraid to Take Risks: Or, it's remarkable what you can get away with in a plot... Like a heroine who doesn't realise she's three-months-pregnant... If you do it with conviction and make it believable. Now in the interests of full disclosure, I have had more than a few crits of that particular book (Pleasure, Pregnancy and a Proposition) because some readers were either unconvinced (or just plain outraged) by that plot hook, but it's also my biggest seller (by a long way) so yes, some readers weren't convinced, but for those that I persuaded to suspend their disbelief it was a risk worth taking.

8). You Can't Please Everyone, So Don't Try: Sort of follows on from 7,  but you really can't please everyone, and the last thing you want is to stop taking risks because you're worried about what people will think... Everyone's got an opinion and rightly so, they've paid money to read your book, but in the end when you're sitting down to write, the opinion that counts the most is yours. You know, in your heart of hearts when something works and when it doesn't, because you've read loads of romances yourself (I hope) and you know when they don't work for you.

9). Don't Believe the Little Voice in Your Head: No, I'm not talking about schizophrenia here, but about that little voice that whispers in every writer's ear at the most difficult, demoralising moment in the process of writing their latest story that their writing totally sucks. That it's a complete fluke you ever got published... Or finished a manuscript... It lies!! You can do it. And to prove it, noone who ever believed that Little Voice and stopped writing got published (or kept getting published). So there, take that Little Voice! (And if you need an extra boost, go read Dr Seuss's Oh, the Places You'll Go!)

10). After the Agony, Comes the Ecstasy: Whether that's just the sense of achievement you feel when you finish a particularly thorny scene to your satisfaction, or the whoop of joy in your stomach when you see your published book on the shelf for the first time, or get a decent review from Dear Author (I got a B this week for On the First Night of Christmas, and boy am I basking here, folks!!). This is bloody hard work, don't ever be fooled by anyone who says it isn't (they're lying!!), but it will eventually be worth it. And just like childbirth, it's agony for a reason, because then the ecstasy is that much more ecstatic. Honest.

So from one writer in North London currently going through the agony...

HAVE A HAPPY WRITING NEW YEAR EVERYONE!

Friday, 11 September 2009

Free ebook Giveaway of Pleasure, Pregnancy and a Proposition

Yippeee! Mills and Boon's ebook giveaway has arrived. So pop on down to this address and you can get an ebook copy of Pleasure, Pregnancy and a Proposition for FREE. That's right absolutely no spondoolicks, nada dinero, niet bucks... All right I've run out of silly money sayings...

Also up for grabs is India Grey's award-winning (and rightly so) Modern, Mistress: Hired for the Billionaire's Pleasure, which is fab, cos I've read it... And there's a very tempting title from Rhonda Nelson in the Blaze series called The Player (check out that guy's nicely-oiled abs!)

It's a little pressie to celebrate their centenary. Happy Birthday M&B!

NB: If you have any probs with the downloads you might want to check out the discussion here on I Heart Presents.

Thursday, 13 August 2009

'Say Yes to Love and Lust!!'

After a tip from my fellow Modern Heat author Nicola Marsh, I've discovered I have my second German book coming out. It's going to be Pleasure, Pregnancy and a Proposition which has the fabulous title in German of (according to the online translation) 'Say Yes to Love and Lust'! I love it, no beating about the bush there then.

Also discovered that the same book is out in the UK in January 2010 as a hardback. Fantastic news... I can't wait to hold my first ever hardback in my hands.

Finally had some sun here in the UK (and about time too). It's glorious here in Wiltshire, the heart of Thomas Hardy country... Which unfortunately makes it even more of a struggle to sit down and work on my ms. Still, at least this one is set in the summer. Got some fabulous tips about places to stay and see in Florence from some friends who lived there for years. Have to admit I'm kinda tempted to go visit and check them out for real (all in the name of research you understand)!!

Friday, 26 June 2009

Free ebook on it's way....


Got some exciting news from my editor last week which I am now passing on... M&B have decided to make Pleasure, Pregnancy and a Proposition one of their free ebook giveaways on their website. It's gonna be available from 17th July, I think. Interesante? Si!

Also, saw an entry on Amazon US and Borders for the Mills and Boon Christmas Treasury of Romance which has my short story One Enchanted Christmas Evening in it (hot boss, single mum, Christmas ball at a top London hotel, yum, yum, yum) and appears to be out in October. I'm chuffed to bits to be in there with names like Lucy Monroe, Julia James and Liz Fielding. What a thrill!

One I needed at the moment cause I seem to be having a bit of tussle with my present ms. I knew I'd spoken too soon... Darn it.

Wednesday, 4 March 2009

Writing Playground

Just back from the Writing Playground where I had a great time blogging yesterday with the playmates (ooh, that didn't come out quite right!)

Suggest anyone who wants to have a good old natter from time to time pops on over there.

Tuesday, 24 February 2009

Double Woo-hooo!

Woke up this morning and there was an email from my Mod Hot mate Natalie Anderson to say Pleasure, Pregnancy and a Proposition had just topped the Waldies list! Thanks Nat. 

What a hoot. And some much needed incentive to get me finally getting this darn book six to work. 

Think I'm finally getting there but boy, oh, boy has this thing been a total slog. I guess some books are just harder than others (and some are complete buggers!)


Also spotted the cover for my June release on Amazon which is totally cool. And yes, there is a certain scene in a luxury hotel bathroom, which would explain why my hero and heroine are having a fairly hot time in their bathtub on that cover.

Will be posting an excerpt from the opening chapter soon on my website so stay posted.

Thursday, 19 February 2009

PHS Must Watch Friday


Psst. Pop on over to the PHS today where I'm blogging about how you can be a feminist and still love the Julia Roberts/Richard Gere prostitute Pygmalian romance Pretty Woman. Interesante, Si!

And shamelessly plugging my latest book into the bargain. Which is called Pleasure, Pregnancy and a Proposition and is currenly flying high on the eharlequin bestseller list... Just in case I haven't mentioned that already.

Monday, 9 February 2009

Banging My Own Drum.... And Mickey Rourke's...

Just a quick note to say my latest Presents is now available online at eharlequin and already flying high in both the bestseller list and the ebooks bestseller list. How wonderfully thrilling!

Just what I needed to get me cracking the whip on my latest WIP. If you remember that's my 'be kind, rewind' epic which I had to start from scratch again a few weeks back. Am plugging away at it, and it's finally taking shape into something really fabulous (honest!). But boy this one is hard work. Remind me again why one should never make a bad boy Irish movie star your hero (thanks again Colin Farrell, this is all your fault, buddy).

Am sneaking a day off at the RNA lunch tomorrow (snow allowing) to cheer on my Mod Hot buddy Kate Hardy and fellow Presents author India Grey who are both up for the coveted Romance Prize. Well, done Ladies. And remember, as Jonathan Ross said at the BAFTAs last night, everyone who's nominated is a winner really.

By the way, you could hear the cheer across Islington when they announced Mickey Rourke as the Best Actor winner. If I've got one film recommendation so far this year, it's go see The Wrestler. Rourke is a genius and, as much as I love Sean Penn, I hope he wins the Oscar too. 

Monday, 21 April 2008

The Chaos Theory... And how to survive it.

Or how to rewrite a novel in three weeks while fitting in a trip to New York (with two kids and a husband), a birthday party and your first day job in an office for ten years... I seriously would not recommend it if you don't want to turn your hair white... Still, it's over now, I'm out the other side and my fourth book has gone to the copy-editors with the title Pleasure, Pregnancy and a Proposition - which pretty much sums up my wonderful story (but not the process of writing it which was more like Agony, Angst and a major case of Apoplexy). It'll be out in the UK in November (I think) and hopefully in the US eventually too - and when I see it on the shelves that frantic subbing on the plane, in an airport lounge, in a hotel room (with Spongebob blazing on the telly) and in an office on my lunch hour will all have been worth it. Anyway, after all the glamour of the RITA nomination it certainly brought me back down to earth with a bang. Whatever happens, you're only as good as your next book — and for me at least they ain't getting any easier to write.

My third book, The Tycoon's Very Personal Assistant has popped up with a fabulous cover on Amazon which I am posting here and which I absolutely love. (It's out in July in the UK and Sept in the US). My hero's dark, my heroine's fair and they've even managed to fit in the red convertible that they whizz round Big Sur in. They look like they're in some Italian piazza when they're supposed to be in Las Vegas, but hey. haven't they got a pastiche of everywhere in Vegas, so I'm not complaining. Totally cool cover, when all's said and done, so I'm feeling all positive and rosy at the moment.

Now all I've got to do is come up with another idea before my next contract deadline in July. Oh crap... My mind's just gone blank.