At once an essay, a tiny touch of memoir and self-help book, add quotes from fellow authors to explain and reinforce the points and you have a very good starting point for aspirant writers (or not) to begin a career and learn what traps to avoid.
Like probably everyone on Earth, I think it would be cool to write a book and see it in stores, but I don't aspire to become a writer, and let's be honest; I'm too anxious and have not enough patience and I'm too lazy for the hard work it sure is, to make a living at it. Jennifer Probst will tell you, just like every author I'm sure : writing for a living may seem like fun, but it's not a hobby, it's a job.
For me, it was more interesting when she talk about her career path and personal experiences. I read it because it's one of my favorite author, so of course I wanted to know more about her. I like to learn how an author found inspiration for her books, her series and what happened in their life and if they always wanted to do that. I wanted to know more about the personal stuff, but I understand it was not what this book is about.
Jennifer Probst knew very young that she wanted to be a writer and wrote her first novel at twelve. Success didn't come quickly or easily and I have lot of admiration for people who try and try, no matter the number of rejection and the trouble because for them, there's no other choice, no plan B, they were made to be this or that and they're gonna try until it works.
One sentence she wrote resonated with me. Here's the quote :
"You must convince the reader that there is no hope, though the reader is promised a happily-ever-after. The book will be a safe place for a reader to experience all the messy, raw emotions of relationships."
A safe place. That's just it ! Jennifer Probst just found the perfect words, the right expression to explain why I read romance and love it so much. A safe place. That's what romance novels are for me.
The chapters on characters were my favorites. I always say that for me, characters are the real hit or miss of a book. Once again, I totally agree with what Jennifer said.
"A book can have the most exotic setting, the most thrilling plot, the deepest theme, but if the reader doesn't care about the characters, the entire book will fall flat."
"Growth is the key to getting readers to fall for character, whether it's a duke, a shape-shifter, or a CEO."
That's the other reason why I love romance so much. I like to see the characters grow, overcome obstacles or their past, discover their true potential or strength and qualities they didn't know they had (and yeah okay, it's to see them fall in love too and the path that take them there :p).
I'm keeping this book, just in case I change my mind one day or if someone I know decide to take a chance I could give it to him/her because there's lot of tips and proposed exercices.
"Series have become extremely popular, and secondary characters are now in the spotlight. Readers enjoy trying to spot the next potential hero or heroine, and imagine him or her as the protagonist in the author's next book."