Chemistry
I write romance. I read romance.* From both points, it’s all
about that undeniable chemistry between the two main characters.
There are arguments spread out across the board on novels:
It’s about the plot!
It’s about the prose!
It’s about the characters!
Thing is, it’s all of those rolled into one. Each of
the above needs to be present, whether or not one element stands above the others, and each of them stems from one thing:
The writing.
The character chemistry is no different. And it isn’t always
about meeting the hottest guy/girl in the entire town. Nor does it have to be
about a literal jolt of sparks, or amazing monkey sex. But it has to be something.
Chemistry also has to be shown quickly. It can be something small
that sets it off, like a shared interest in music or hobbies that gets them
talking and ignites it. Or it can be that literal jolt from touching. But if
something doesn’t gel, from early on, the reader won’t feel much of a spark
when, all of the sudden, out of nowhere, two people are in lust then, ultimately, love.
There are tried and true tropes: hate to love, where the initial chemistry is shown through aggression of some sort before boiling over to desire; friends to lovers, where long-term friends already have a camaraderie that builds through a slow burn; long-lost lover, where old flames reconnect with an immediate reigniting of the old spark… and so on.
My favorite thing, which isn’t necessarily a trope—but can be, is a meet cute. I am a sucker for a, um, cute meet-cute. Do you have a favorite romance trope?
*I read lots of genres, but not in the vast quantities I consume the lurve stories.
LAST CALL (Tara Watson)
meet-cute
[My ex-husband hung up and I lifted the
phone to text my older kiddo.]
Scott was probably out with his
girlfriend by this time on a Friday night. If I called, he’d be sure to give a
lecture that would put his father to shame. Another future lawyer: just what
our family—and the world—needed. I tapped Tyler’s name instead. At the same
time, the sticky mat under my feet vanished. Both of my heels slid over the
slick tile, my left not stopping. I twisted my right ankle, tumbling backward
and flailing out to grab hold of some anchor.
I sunk fingernails into something
soft and warm.
“Crap.” The word huffed out as my
back hit the ground and I lost half my breath. A weight crushed my chest and
claimed the rest of the air from my lungs. My head hit the rubber floor mat and
bounced. Smack into a very hard part of the thing that had landed on top of me.
My hand flew to cover my stinging
nose and I squeezed down the tears that leapt into my eyes.
“I’m so sorry,” said a deep male
voice from above.
Comments
My favourite books are hard to categorise, and refuse to be confined to any one genre.
Hopefully chemistry is she tries his patience and his aloofness intrigues her. Because that's what I wrote.
Alex, I hope so. Cause flip that around and you've got the above story that I wrote. ;-p
One thing I *don't* like much is characters eager to jump into bed but that save the "I love you" for the ending. It doesn't seem right or realistic, somehow. Except in Pretty Woman [bg]