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Pros & Cons
Pros
Rayne hall and susanne mccarthy's book is a must-have reference for romance writers. It explains how to write a love story, whether it's a romance or a subplot in any other genre. Hall and mccarthy do a great job of breaking down scenarios that you ma... Read More
Highlights
Competitiveness
This how to write book exceeded expectations
Overview
- How are reviewers describing this item?
romance, useful, first and good. - Our engine has profiled the reviewer patterns and has determined that there may be deception involved.
- Our engine has determined that the review content quality is low.
- Our engine has analyzed and discovered that 66.7% of the reviews are reliable.
- This product had a total of 73 reviews as of our last analysis date on May 12 2022.
Helpful InsightsBETA
Posted by a reviewer on Amazon
I really enjoyed the book it was very helpful in breaking down how to add the romantic element to your writing and how to make it believable and not to the point where it was a cheesy romance novel
Posted by a reviewer on Amazon
Someday i would like rayne hall to write something more detailed about strucure vs plot could be i missed it
Posted by a reviewer on Amazon
Some selfpublished stuff is unedited garbage
Posted by a reviewer on Amazon
If you write romance or have romance interests in your stories this book is a musthave reference
Posted by a reviewer on Amazon
First of all let me just comment that this book isn’t just for romance writers
Posted by a reviewer on Amazon
One of my favourite exercises for example is a suggestion to improve your ‘first meeting’ scene by writing a scene set 50 years on where your characters are reminiscing about their first impressions
Posted by a reviewer on Amazon
It’s really about how to write a love story whether that’s the focus of the story a romance or whether it’s a romantic subplot in any other genre of fiction
Posted by a reviewer on Amazon
From sweet and chaste right through to erotic every story will benefit from the author taking a good hard look at who their characters are and what makes them ‘click’ as a believable couple or indeed what makes them fail if you’re writing a nonromance which doesn’t need a happy ending
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