10 mars 2007

Madame X

Poor Madame X.

In the last few months the damsel has been langishing, neglected and all but forgotten in the veritable oubliette of my computer.

She's traveled far -- across empires -- from Paris to St. Petersburg. But she has yet to meet her hero, although naught but a mere door now separates them.

Poor, poor Madame X. Although in reality she's a madamoiselle, but we'll get to that later. . .

I've known for some time that in order to accomplish anything -- and I mean anything -- I require some form of external accountability. Without it, I'm hopeless. A parapatetic in the land of projects.

So I've installed one of those ubiquitous word meters to keep me honest and keep me motivated. I should have one for everything I undertake. But that would mean slathering the walls of my flat with blackboard paint and, really, the aesthete in me rebels at the thought.

I am also asking for assistance to keep me focused. My background is in research and I have a troublesome tendency to toddle off on tangents. The fashions of a period, what they ate, how they spent their leisure time, and the like, are fascinating to me, but obviously not to every romance reader. Particularly if the story is taking place against a backdrop with which most are not familiar. To wit,
Madame X takes place in Catherine the Great's Russia.

My question to you, therefore, is this:

What is most appealing or off-putting in an historical romance that takes place outside what might be called your 'genre of choice'? In other words, if,
for example, you tend to read regency historicals, what might tempt you to buy something different and what, aside from rubbish writing or an absurd storyline, might cause you to chuck it in the bin?

Xenia and I would be most appreciative of your insights.

8 Comments:

At 08:55, Blogger Unknown said...

I'm open to location and time period, but there are plot devices I abhor, the virgin widow being one of them. I recently read a book where the heroine actually inadvertantly married her FATHER---they discovered this in the knick of time and did not consummate the marriage, but whoa---wallbanger if there ever was one.

 
At 09:55, Blogger Rebecca de Courcy said...

Alice -
Thanks for the suggestion re. the goals board. Might be just what I need!

Maggie -
I agree re. the virgin widow. Just a little too pat and more than a little unbelievable (unless he died before they reached the bedroom! hmmmm...). And as for the book you describe, I'm not sure I wouldn't have put it down never to pick it up again. Ick!

 
At 20:19, Blogger Shelli Stevens said...

You know I love historical, but not so much regency. Something that might tempt me, would be a plot point that usually draws me in. A kidnapping, forced marriage, etc. Some kind of plot that transfers from any genre, so I'll forget it's not usually a genre I read.

 
At 23:33, Blogger Lenora Bell said...

I think if I was browsing in a bookstore, and found a contemporary with a gorgeous cover and the words "dark, gothic, sensual, secretive" (you get the picture), I might buy it. So that would be me going outside of my genre (historical) but sticking with my favorite subgenre (erotic/gothic). But I recently abandoned a gothic historical (featuring those exact key words on the cover) halfway through because I didn't care about the main characters. The heroine was too meek and mousy, and the hero was boring and tame. Make me passionate about the protagonists and I don't care what genre it is.

Also, it sounds like I am in exactly the same circumstance as you when it comes to requiring some form of external accountability. I'm still searching for a method that works...

 
At 12:14, Blogger Ericka Scott said...

A great cover and a great blurb, something with a new take on the genre (to echo Shelli's comments) -- and I read all sorts, mystery, romance, horror, backs of cereal boxes. . .

I, too, should check out the goals board. I'm pretty good about writing 500 words a day. . .but I love surfing, and blogging, and researching. . .sometimes it takes HOURS to get to that magic 500 number!

 
At 21:40, Blogger Lenora Bell said...

Hi Rebecca, I'm holding to your promise of a margarita tour in July!

 
At 15:55, Blogger Cynthia Falcon said...

Apparently I have a knack for Futuristic Sci-Fi, according to several people at Fanlit Forever. The funny thing is I never was one who was all agog over Star Trek or Battle Star Galactica or any of those other futuristic TV shows. I do have an affinity to Star Wars though. *shrug*

 
At 20:59, Blogger Lenora Bell said...

Rebecca, I am longing for news of Madame X's hero. Who is he? Has she met him yet? Did her toes tingle?

xoxo
LB

 

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