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| Screamy is scared |
Which meant, of course, that I HAD to.
I'm always of the opinion that if it's scary to write and you don't want to go there, then you have to write it. Believe me, the times I haven't gone there and pulled the characters back, have been the times when the story gets derailed. It becomes mediocre and flat. Because you can't trick your characters. They want what they want and if they don't get it, they get pissy with you and just lay there like cardboard cutouts.
So, I anyway, I wrote the scene they wanted. And it was intense. And I'm scared to death of keeping it in because it could be a rejectionable offence. But it could also be the scene that sells the book. Oh and also, if I take it out, their whole relationship falls apart since they needed that scene to happen in order to fall in love.
This is why pushing those boundaries they're always talking about is hard. Because you don't know which side of the boundary you're standing on and it could be the wrong one. But it's also why you have to write those kinds of scenes and not pull back. Those scenes are the ones that can be the most emotional, the most wrenching, the ones that take your book from being 'okay' to 'unputdownable'. They're not easy scenes to write and they shouldn't be. The best ones never are.
Of course, I don't know what side of the boundary I'm on but I do know that the scene was intensely emotional and I cried while writing it so at least that's one person who likes it. :-)
So I'm going to advise you to write the uncomfortable scene. If your characters want to go where you're afraid to take them, take them anyway and don't pull back. Ignore the voices that are telling you the hero/heroine can't do that, that it's not PC, that it's not sympathetic. Just write it, push it as far as you can. Then see what you have. Pulling back is easier than ramping up and if you don't go as far as you can, then you don't know how far it actually needs to go.
It's scary but it's worth it.
So have you ever had characters do something that scares you? Did you let them do it?

4 comments:
OH dear girl. Tell me about it. I have had long hard discussions with one of my heroes, but he tells me that while he bitterly regrets what he did, there was no other course of action he could or would have done in that situation. He and I have come to an agreement that he simply isn't a Presents hero. Or even perhaps a publishable one. But he is at least true to his rather damaged self.
Jackie,
I AGREE HUGELY! I struggle with this myself a lot. My last hero, who I affectionately (ha) call The Ice Man did indeed scare my pants off. He says it himself in the MS. He is, in so many ways, the villain of the story. And it scared me. I find truth is scary. Because it reveals something about us. And that is...yeah, it's scary.
Someone said on twitter the other day: Live with no shame. Write with even less.
Wonder what that would free us up to do? :)
Fiona - I think everyone is redeemable (unless it involves kids). And you definitely have to be true to the character's self. I'm hoping my sheikh is.
Maisey - oh, I LOVE that comment!! Almost as much as I love the Ice Man. Yes, it does say something about us, doesn't it? Or minds take us to some pretty dark places in that case. Ahem. :-)
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