Showing posts with label new romance sub-genre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label new romance sub-genre. Show all posts

Saturday, March 30, 2013

Taking The Bounce: Get Back Up and Try Again By: Courtney Leigh


To give y'all a little of Courtney Leigh's background... I graduated from UC Davis (after I studied abroad in Scotland for a year!) with a double BD in Political Science and English. I gave up a plush job to move to Arizona and work part-time at my parents' dog boarding kennel. I did that to start my writing career. Now I'm a published freelance writer, and all the closer to being a published author. We all know it's a matter of the amount of grit and sweat (and sometimes tears!) we're willing to invest, that makes us persevere.

It was a journey for me to find my fiction genre. But once I made the commitment to 20th century historical romance, I had a former editor from Harper & Row tell me my writing was absolutely superb (yay!), but 1940s war-time romance didn't sell (argh). I got that a lot in the responses I received to queries from agents and editors alike. This is the blurb for Seasons of Change...

A soulful love that transcends the atrocities of WWII Europe...

American expatriate and Resistance legend, Evangeline, vows to lay down her gun. Only upon Colt's insistence, an American soldier whose love promises a happiness she feels unworthy of, Evangeline agrees to leave Europe and returns to her family's Texas cattle ranch. Her personal war has just begun.

As she waits for Colt stateside, she must face the demons from her past for the sake of her future. When love and happiness are the prize, will her resolve be enough to defeat a home front enemy she never encountered as a spy in Europe?
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Seasons of Change speaks to those who have bravely waited for a loved one's return, or who have fought to return home themselves. Evangeline and Colt prove that love and determination are more powerful than any bullet, any bomb. Any war.
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It has taken me almost a year to bounce back from being told that war-time fiction was a hard-sell. But now that I have had time to really think myself into a clearer vision, I have bounced back with vigor. I've heard the phrase, "Taking The Bounce," as a way to describe getting up and trying again. I like it, so I use it. For some reason it keeps me thinking positive thoughts...

I took the bounce by asking myself how I could effectively pull a larger crowd of romance readers into the catacombs of history. What I came up with, which has become a new, true passion, is Decopunk.

Decopunk romance covers the 1920s to the 1930s (and into the early 40s) Art Deco aesthetics, and is a futuristic rendition of the past--just as Steampunk has done with the mid-to-late 1800s--by introducing modern technology (cell phones, laptops, speed detectors, jet engines, etc.) that didn't exist in real-time history. Have any of you seen Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow? How about The Shadow? There's even an episode in season one of Fringe that covers Decopunk.

But I haven't read anything in the romance genre that coincides. The closest I've come to what exists in book form that aligns with my vision, are comic books. And they are very popular when they're done right (hey, I know the readership is different, but it's just a matter of very, very visual description, people!).

So as part of my bounce back, and making the bounce work for me, I've been working on two Decopunk manuscripts that are fresh, new, and vibrant. Some of you may wonder what these romances are about, but I'm still in the developmental stages, so unfortunately I don't even have blurbs for them--because I don't know the endings myself yet (gulp!). In order to find out more about these bounce-back stories, you may want to follow my future blogs on RTG. I'm planning an exciting April...

Tell me what you think about the idea of putting Art Deco aesthetics with modern technology and romance. Can you imagine Gretta Garbo or Vivien Leigh holding smart phones (cased in mahogany with silver-plated industrial detail, and touch screen technology)? When have you, as writers, had to bounce back with a vengeance? Give me your story.

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

The Next Trend in Romance Fiction


Madelle Morgan

 Anti-Aging Fiction.  You heard it here first.

Like death and taxes, aging is inevitable. Millions of Baby Boomer women are now in their mid-40s to their mid-60s, and I’m one of them. Ten years ago when Nip/Tuck, the series about a plastic surgery practice, debuted I wasn’t interested in watching. Now I am. In fact, I bought the series on DVD. Why? Ten years ago I could pass for a 30-something. Now I can’t. 

A bar bouncer (in dim light) asked a slim 45 year old friend for ID. She kissed him. 

My tastes are changing. I’m interested in a new kind of shapeshifter – liposuction. A TV news segment on Vampire Facelifts caught my attention like nothing since Spike turned up in Buffy’s world. The fantasy I want to read includes Fountain of Youth elixirs.  

My hubby and I joke that if we won the lottery the first thing we’d do is spend several months at Southern U.S. and European spa resorts (he calls them fat farms). 

www.czechtourism.com
We want to look like this:

We Boomers long to repair the ravages of time, and my theory is that women of a certain age wish to read about how to do it successfully.

I predict that romance authors will ride the upswing of interest in anti-aging, and will adapt their fiction to the Boomer obsession with looking and feeling young. 

I’ve brainstormed a couple of Anti-Aging sub-genre book blurbs.

The Offer He Couldn’t Refuse: InventoCorp CEO Jackie Winston temporarily switches bodies with a gorgeous 25 year old employee to seduce a playboy client and close a multi-million dollar deal. Then they fall in love. Will he still love her when he finds out she’s 48?

Can’t Get Enough: Food Scientist Jewel Rogers, age 55, drinks a smoothie made from a newly-discovered Amazon superfruit, and wakes the next day to discover she has the body of a 30 year old. But there is one side effect – an insatiable libido. Her conservative husband George can’t keep up (or keep it up). Will George allow a young, hot male neighbor to join the fun?

In your opinion is there a market for similar anti-aging themed romances targeted to 40+ year old readers? Would you read them?

www.imdb.com
I’ll close with a lovely quote from an equally lovely 78 year old woman.

There is a fountain of youth: it is your mind, your talents, the creativity you bring to your life and the lives of people you love. When you learn to tap this source, you will truly have defeated age.


Sophia Loren





www.madellemorgan.com
Diamond Lust: Diamonds weren't this girl's best friend.