Wednesday, June 13, 2012
Hot or Not?
I've been following an interesting debate on Twitter recently about whether or not the male romantic leads in YA novels need to be hot.
Argument A: Not every teenage boy is hot. In fact, the vast majority of them are probably not hot. There are plenty of guys that are good boyfriend material who are not drop dead gorgeous. And on the flip side, just because a guy is super duper sexy, that doesn't automatically make him good boyfriend material. When it comes down to it, a lot of the hot guys are self-obsessed jerks. So making teen girls that are reading these books believe that they have to find a guy who is beautiful and swoon worthy is unrealistic and, frankly, ridiculous. Not to mention overdone.
Argument B: Teen girls want to read about hot guys. They want to fantasize about their Edward Cullens and their Jacob Blacks. It's just a fact of life. If you write an average-looking character, teen girls will not find him swoon worthy, and your book will not sell. Simple as that.
These are obviously the two extremes of the argument, and there's certainly a place for middle ground. Which is around where I am. Because I very much agree that not all male leads need to be the stereotypical version of hot (like the otherworldly/godly beautiful boy, or the sexy bad boy, etc.). Not by any stretch of the mind. As long as your MC finds him attractive, that's the part that really matters. It's all in the description. The words you choose to have your MC describe this character. You can describe a character's traits that might not necessarily be included in the mainstream definition of hot, but if you do so well (i.e. endearingly, making it very clear that the MC likes this trait), I think that's wonderful.
Because really, what matters more in a book is who the character actually is. His personality. How he interacts with the MC. How he talks in general. His quirks. His flaws. How he overcomes his flaws. What he does when it's crunch time, and he has to either stand up and make the hard decision, or wimp out and take the safe road. All of that, ladies and gentlemen, is what makes a character truly attractive. Using hotness as a character trait, or more specifically, as the most important character trait, is just plain laziness.
Personally, I've gone both ways. The love interest in my book Diamond Tears, Robin, is definitely more cute than hot. For example, one of his traits that my MC loves/finds most endearing is that his hair kind of sticks up from time to time. Usually when he's upset, and therefore running his hands through his hair. Hardly the look of a one of these Adonis leads who always looks perfect all of the time. He has three older brothers who are big, beefy guys. And when compared to them, he comes off looking scrawny as hell. In fact, he's actually a tiny bit shorter than my MC. I know that a lot of women would consider that a deal breaker, but that's something I've never understood. Who the crap cares how tall a guy is? Do people seriously decide that someone can't possibly be right for them as a human being because their genes made them short?
[If that sounded a bit ranty, I apologize. I may have mentioned elsewhere on this blog (and I have certainly mentioned on Twitter) that my husband is six inches shorter than me. And some people actually are incredibly shocked when they see us together, and think we're abnormal people for being able to "get over it." Still haven't figured out what there is to get over.]
Anyway, then there was my absolutely beautiful vampire, James Quinn. This one was from flawed book number three, Hidden Stars. I made him a perfect, sexy creature from top to bottom. Why did I do this? Because it was fun.
Why did I make Robin not a perfect, sexy creature from top to bottom? Because it was also fun. And I am absolutely in love with them both. So I guess my ultimate opinion is that I see no reason why we can't just have some variety. As long as your hot guys are more than the sum of their parts. Otherwise, I'm just not interested.
Monday, June 4, 2012
Camp NaNoWriMo, or Am I Crazy?
So I have become incredibly ambitious with my writing of late. Plenty of other writers might not think it's all that ambitious, but for me, trying to write 50k words in a single month is downright unheard of. I've tended to be more of a slow and steady wins the race kind of person. For example, as I think I've mentioned in the past, I spent seven years working on my first two books (parts of an unfinished trilogy). Since then, I've gotten a little faster. Diamond Tears, which was my fastest yet, took me one year and three months start to finish. And I couldn't believe I managed to finish it that quickly. So pretty much a whole draft of a book in a month???
If you have no idea what I'm talking about, Camp NaNoWriMo is the summer version of National Novel Writing Month (which is in November). I think that, in its purest form, participants are supposed to write a novel start to finish, at least 50k words, during the month of June. But I had already written a little over 10k words of my new WIP and was in no way ready to put it aside. So my goal is to just write 50k words (or more, if that's what it takes to finish) instead.
And I'm off to a good start! I couldn't write at all on day 1 of Camp NaNoWriMo (Friday), as I had already made plans to hang out with my awesome mother-in-law, long before I knew that I would be engaging in this insanity. But to make up for it, I set myself the goal of hitting 5k words on both Saturday and Sunday. And it worked! My WIP is now already over 21k words long. Since I'm estimating a total length somewhere between 60k and 70k words, that's a nice, big chunk of the novel. You have no idea how truly and utterly excited I am by this whole thing. Let's just see if I can keep up this level of productivity without going off the deep end.
I created a page for my newest writing obsession, which can be found here. As you can see, it is (tentatively) titled Dr. Pepper Kisses and Vodka Smiles. I say tentatively not because I don't love this title (which I do), but because I'm not even sure if I am legally allowed to have a product name in the title of my book. I suppose I shall have to do some research. But even if I can't, it can make me happy for now.
On a separate note, I received a partial request while I was driving home from work one day last week. I always have my phone on vibrate and hold it in my hand while I drive, because I listen to incredibly loud music (my hearing is crap, so that's the only way I can hear the words). So if I had the ringer on, I wouldn't be able to hear it anyway. At any rate, a glance at the little preview window on my beloved iPhone yielded the words "Query" and "intrigued." Happy town, population me. :)
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