How to Write for Harlequin Intrigue
Rebecca York (aka Ruth Glick) © 2004
I'm frequently asked for advice on writing for Harlequin
Intrigue. Here are some of my thoughts on the subject.
Since these are short books, between 70,000 and 75,000 words, I write them the
same way I'd climb into a lion's cagevery carefully, with a lot of thought
before I ever get to Chapter One.
I think of an Intrigue as having three basic components: an emotional romance, a strong
danger element, and a mystery that the characters and the reader must solve. All
these parts must fit together in one seamless whole.
Here's a mini-example of how I might begin an Intrigue: The heroine is
determined to bring her sister's killer to justice and thinks the hero's family
is responsible. They meet while they're both searching the sister's house
for clues; the bad guy ambushes them both, and they barely get out of the house alive.
Now they're trying to solve the murder togetherand save their own lives
from the killer who has focused on them.
This opening brings all the important ingredients into play, and they all must flow
together throughout the story. If I have to pull back on any element to give
enough play to the other twoit's the mystery that gets less attention. I
try to weave it into the story, but I want to keep my focus on the developing relationship
between the h/h heightened by the danger/suspense.
I do use the viewpoint of secondary characters in moderation, most often the villain, but
I basically tell the story from the point of view of the hero and heroine. I try to
keep them on page together as much as possible, and I always have them meet very
close to the beginning of the novel. Not because it's part of a formula, but
because the book is short, and the characters are the focus of the story.
These people give life to the plot. It's their emotional reaction to the danger
and to each other that pulls the reader in and makes her care. I love writing
tough, hard-bitten, wounded heroes redeemed by the love of a good woman. My heroines
must also be strongin order to stand up to these men and also to survive the fearful
situations I create for them. My women are as likely to rescue their guys from death
as the other way around.
For me, the emotional/sexual component is a big part of the story. I want to feel
the growing sexual tension between two characters thrown into a pressure cooker of peril.
I want them to fall deeply, passionately in love. And I want them to
fear that their newfound happiness can be snatched away at any moment by the evil forces
bent on their destruction. My stories explore their passion and their desperation
through love scenes that focus on the intimacy of their physical relationship.
But I'm always mindful that the push-pull of an Intrigue plot can create problems
here. To heighten the danger and the tension, the time frame of the story should be
short. Yet if the action is compressed, how can these people really have time to
fall in love? Often I solve the problem by giving them a shared past. They don't
meet for the first time at her sister's house. They meet againand are
forced to solve the relationship problems that pulled them apart.
I love putting my characters through hell, because I know they have the strength to take
what I'm dishing out. And I'm going to reward them in the end with the
warm, lasting relationship they've always longed for.
During the course of the story, it's all a juggling act. But writing for
Intrigue is the perfect venue for the author who wants to try her hand at stirring
suspense and danger into her romance.
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