Romance Writer's Handbook: How to Write Romantic Fiction and Get It Published FROM THE PUBLISHER
In 50 chapters, The Romance Writer's Handbook takes aspiring writers through a quick course in writing romantic fiction for today's markets. Here is "from-the-ground-up" advice on how to begin to climb romance writing's ladder of success.
Romance fiction makes up over half of all mass-market novels sold. It is ever-welcoming to newcomers, as editors search through queries and conference appointments for the next Nora Roberts or Barbara Delinsky.
The short chapters provide practical information to help improve your stories. They offer advice on creating new but familiar heroes and heroines; crafting plot complications; and tackling thorny issues from point-of-view conundrums to steamy love scenes.
FROM THE CRITICS
Library Journal
Of the many handbooks aimed at helping aspiring authors achieve success in the increasingly competitive romance fiction market, this lively, accessible guide by writer and webmaster (www.Romance-Central. com) Vinyard is one that unpublished writers at all levels should find useful. While it is not deeply comprehensive, it offers a good place to start with concise chapters on everything from "Top 10 Beginner's Blunders" to entire sections on the writing craft, manuscript submission, resources, and support, inspiration, and commiseration. Advice-giving interviews with a bevy of romance heavyweights, such as Susan Elizabeth Phillips and Suzanne Brockman, are an added bonus. While most authors agree that writing is not learned from a book, this readable handbook is a useful, informative resource that would be at home in library collections with large fiction readerships. Vinyard lives in the Dallas area. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.