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L is for Leenna's Love post 💖 |
You would think writing about love is easy. Everyone knows it. It’s a universal feeling—akin to occasionally choking on water or tearing when dust gets in your eye. You just can’t go through life without having some dramatic and automatic response to it: first love, love at first sight, love/hate, second chance at love, puppy-love, mature love... The range, range within ranges, and unpredictable twisting into new forms and equations, that’s where it gets complicated—just like all love relationships, no matter how simple they seem. Why?
Because Love + Two Hearts = Messy Stuff where Messy Stuff = misunderstandings + wild hopes + irrational thoughts and behaviour + jealousy + adoration + gooey feelings + outside intervention + ... + ... + ...
So, when writing a story, all plots and intentions for a love relationship (or what loved crazed, infatuated, manipulative individuals will do) tends to go out the window. Characters (good guys and villains) want their stories told, their behaviours explained, and their happy-ending—no matter the cost. They are all in pursuit of True Love (or its most durable facsimile) just like you. And unlike you, they can break the rules (and sometimes the law, or even the laws of physics) to do it. Why?
Because Fiction.
But a writer of romance, suspense, and sci-fi/fantasy with romantic bits, needs to write believable love fiction. Why?
Because Love is a process. If you don’t show or allude to the process and its stage, the story implodes leaving you and the reader with >0 (or less than zero).
I admit, I don’t always get the equations right, but when I do, it is hugely satisfying! I got close to getting it right in my first season of Quest For The Wholly Pale. I had not anticipated Silverbirch stealing Emrys’ heart while swigging beer in the student Ref. But she did, changing the path of the story. Lucky for me, that was in Episode 3 and I thought I foreshadowed their hidden feelings well. Sadly, not all readers picked up the clues. Why?
Because Subtlety-in-Love can = Invisibility to persons-concerned where: persons-concerned are oblivious or misunderstand or disbelieving. And Emrys and Silverbirch were very subtle, being friends first.
I got closer to getting it right in the series Settle Down Now. InUnsettled-The Prequel, I tried the following:
Falling in Love+Break-up = competition + attraction + misunderstanding + deception + jealousy + fear
I tried perfecting it in Settle Down Now (the novel) with the following:
Reconciled Love = maturity + proximity + danger + jealousy + sincere love + teamwork + communication
I think I got it right, but Love (as I said before) is messy with endless permutations. Then again, I was never good at Maths. Why?
Because Mathematics = Not Fiction (with the exception of Unreal Numbers).
Fortunately, Love is Real, even when it is fiction. No prior mathematical knowledge needed.
See if I got close to your right equation in Settle Down Now the series, No Distance To Run, and Quest For The Wholly Pale.
And let me know what is your equation for Love, in fiction and real life. Why?
Because: everyone loves a good Love story, even ones with strange equations.
About the Author
Leenna writes cross-genre suspense, romance and dabbles in sci-fi/fantasy. Her episodic fiction includes Quest For The Wholly Pale.
Her short stories have appeared in The Mad Scientist Journal, SciPhi Journal and Cosmic Roots and Eldritch Shores.
Her novels include No Distance To Run and Settle Down Now.
Leenna’s most unnerving experiences include: looking a red kangaroo in the eye, flipping pancakes for the first time ever in front of her class, interviewing Alan Dean Foster by email, and teaching a hellhound how to share a biscuit. Sometimes she writes about these and other less nerve-wracking things; sometimes she doesn’t.
See you tomorrow for another post in the A to Z challenge!
💜 Linzé