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- Category
- Characters
- Editing
- Structure
- GMC
- Plotting
- POV
- Voice
- Worldbuilding
- $5 off Early Registration Coupon-expires 1 week before class starts
- CONFLICTKNIGHT
The basic building blocks of romance fiction are conflicts: internal, external, and romantic. Strong conflicts drive readers to keep reading in order to discover who wins.
No matter how beautiful the writing is, if the conflict isn’t strong enough, the reader will get bored and go read something else. Great conflicts, on the other hand, can turn a book into a bestseller and an author into an autobuy.
New York Times bestselling author Angela Knight explains how she designs conflicts for maximum punch, then uses them to construct a climax that is both unpredictable and powerful. She provides students with worksheets they can use to design their own conflicts, then determine how to resolve them in an emotionally satisfying way.
No matter how beautiful the writing is, if the conflict isn’t strong enough, the reader will get bored and go read something else. Great conflicts, on the other hand, can turn a book into a bestseller and an author into an autobuy.
New York Times bestselling author Angela Knight explains how she designs conflicts for maximum punch, then uses them to construct a climax that is both unpredictable and powerful. She provides students with worksheets they can use to design their own conflicts, then determine how to resolve them in an emotionally satisfying way.
- Syllabus
- Lessons include:
- Introduction: The importance of Conflict
- What is Conflict?
- The Three forms of Conflict in Romance
- Conflict as the Building Blocks of Character
- Internal Conflict as the Key to Three-Dimensional Characters
- Romantic Conflict as the Spine of the Romance
- External Conflict as the Bones of the Plot
- Using Each type of Conflict to Complicate the Others
- Building the Plot from Conflict Events
- Writing powerful Turning Points for Conflicts
- Writing Conflict Resolutions
- Using the Resolutions of the Internal and Romantic Conflicts in the External Climax.
- Conclusion