Romance – Or Else

Valentine’s Day

Be A NovelistIn this the Valentine month thoughts turn to love, romance, courtship, and all the joy and pain it brings. For the novelist, however, these thoughts are never far from mind no matter the month or the holiday.

The idea of a mythical being named Cupid has been with us for eons of time. Depicted – in this age at least – as a chubby little character armed with his bow and fatal arrow seeking hapless folk upon which to inflict love, passion, and desire for a certain other. Even Shakespeare in A Midsummer Night’s Dream gave Cupid his due, noting that he is not only effective, but blind as well.

Love looks not with the eyes, but with the mind,
And therefore is winged Cupid painted blind.
Nor hath love’s mind of any judgement taste;
Wings and no eyes figure unheedy haste.
And therefore is love said to be a child
Because in choice he is so oft beguiled.

Everyone Loves a Love Story

For as long as there have been novels, love has often played a leading role in the plot. Readers never tire of it. Romance novels sell as well today as they ever did. Everyone loves a love story.

Never has this truth been more clearly evidenced as it is in the play Pygmalion by George Be A NovelistBernard Shaw. The central theme of his story is transformation. It depicts the transformation in Eliza Doolittle after Henry Higgins changes her from a cockney flower girl to an upper class lady who conducts herself with decorum and speaks impeccable English.

This play later became the noted movie, My Fair Lady, starring Audrey Hepburn. The two however, have very different endings. In the play Eliza, after being changed, can neither go forward as the duchess Higgins falsely made her out to be; nor can she ever go back to selling flowers on the street as a cockney girl. In anguish she leaves him.

Suddenly realizing that he too has been transformed, Henry searches her out and begs her to return. Not because he loves her but because now he sees that he needs her. His suggestion is that the three of them – he, Colonel Pickering and Eliza – live together in a sort of a bachelor arrangement. When she again tells him good-bye forever, he still cannot understand what went wrong. Henry Higgins is no gentleman (at least not in the play) and is no lover.

Audiences Hated It

But – and here comes the rub – audiences hated it. What did they want? They wanted a love story. They wanted romance. Shaw wrote a story of transformation and how those changes affect not only the individual, but those in close proximity.

His audiences – up to and including those who love the movie – refuse to accept that plot ending. Even producers of the play in later years were guilty of re-writing the end to please the audience.

Be Prepared

What are we to learn from this as novelists? Everyone loves a love story. And there are countless ways to weave a plot to include the finer points of how many ways love can go right – and wrong.

We can also learn that if we prefer a theme of transformation over a theme of romance Be A Novelistwe’d better be prepared for the fallout that may come from our readers. (You have been warned.)

Happy Valentine’s Day!

Photo Credit: © Agno_agnus | Dreamstime.com

~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~

Are you one of those budding novelists who make a great start but who can’t seem to Be A Novelistfinish?  Then this is for you!  Be A Novelist, Six-Month, Finish-My-Novel Challenge!  Six full months of guidance and instruction. Guaranteed to light a fire under your novel-writing attempts and to launch you into a pattern of consistent writing! Details right here!

~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~

Posted in Be A Novelist | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

I Love Making an Author Discovery

Discovering a Jewel

In our city-county library where I live there is always a bookshelf of books for sale for ridiculously low prices. (This is true in every branch location of the entire system.) Since I have three young grandchildren who love to read, it’s a must-stop for me each time I’m in my local branch location. (Which is quite often, I have to admit.)

Theodore TaylorUpon one occasion, I came across a juvenile fiction entitled The Cay by Theodore Taylor on these sale shelves. I hasten to add here that since I write for this audience, juvenile fiction is a staple of my reading diet. I purchased the book for fifty cents and went home to realize later that I had discovered a jewel. If you are familiar with the works of this prolific, life-long author please don’t embarrass me by telling me. Just compliment me for finally making it to your grade level. (smile)

Mind Boggling Details

I devoured that captivating story. The plot involves a young boy who during WWII was traveling on a ship from the Caribbean Island of Curacao heading back to the states when it was torpedoed by the enemy and the boy is cast adrift. He is aided by an illiterate West Indian deckhand and the two become castaways on a deserted island. I was impressed not only by the plotting skills of this author, but also his amazing knowledge of the subject at hand – West Indian culture and survival skills. The details of their methods of survival are mind boggling.

I was now eager to know more about Theodore Taylor. I learned that he died in 2006 at the age of 85. I also learned of his extensive library of works produced during his lifetime. I then learned that many of these titles were in our library system. That started me on a quest to read even more of Mr. Taylor’s works. I could scarcely believe the wide variety of his vast storehouse of knowledge.

His Storehouse of Knowledge

I read Lord of the Kill, wherein this author displayed intricate knowledge of the exploitation of wild game animals.

In Billy the Kid, he seems to know every detail of the desert Southwest.

In the Outer Banks Trilogy, he shows his knowledge of the distinct culture of the Outer Banks of SC during the 1800s, in addition to his extensive knowledge of ships and shipping of that day.

In Ice Drift, he displays his extensive knowledge of the Inuit people of the Arctic Circle inIce Drift the mid 1800s, in addition to the character of the treacherous ever-changing ice in that region.

I could continue my list, but you get the idea. This man, who has been gone from the world for several years, has inspired me and excited me, in addition to giving me awesome stories to enjoy.

Heights of Ecstasy

Only another author, or avid reader, can grasp the heights of ecstasy to which this discovery has taken me.

Oh, I also learned he had a distinct distrust for computers and technology.

Thank you Theodore Taylor for sticking to your typewriter through all those years so I could enjoy such a feast.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~

Are you one of those budding novelists who make a great start but who can’t seem to Be A Novelistfinish?  Then this is for you!  Be A Novelist, Six-Month, Finish-My-Novel Challenge!  Six full months of guidance and instruction. Guaranteed to light a fire under your novel-writing attempts and to launch you into a pattern of consistent writing! Details right here!

~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~

Posted in Be A Novelist | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments