Who, What, When, Where, Why? Every journalist and journalism
student has those five questions burned into their brains. A reporter
tries to answer the five Ws within the first paragraph or two.
For example, a good lead might be: A young Kansas (WHERE) girl
named
Dorothy (WHO) is missing (WHAT) after a tornado swept through
her family's
farm (WHY) last night. (WHEN) Also missing is the girl's pet dog,
Toto.
Who, what, when, where, why? Those famous five questions... Those
famous five questions of the journalist must be answered, or at
least alluded to, in order to pull the reader into your romance.
Who is this story about? What’s going on? What’s the
problem they are facing? When is this happening? Where is it located?
Why is the most critical question. Why should the reader care?
Why should they read on?
Make every word count. This is especially true in freelancing
where writers are paid by the word. In novels, where there are
so many words, it’s easy to let freeloaders jump on board.
Ask yourself, would you pay for this word? This sentence? This
paragraph?
Respect deadlines. In a newspaper a missed deadline often kills
the story and doesn’t do a journalist’s reputation
any good. Romance editors work on schedules, too. Meet your deadlines
and if for some reason you can’t, let your editor know as
soon as possible. Deadlines can also be your friends. I admit
to being a bit of a deadline junkie. I produce a lot more when
I know I must. Get into the deadline habit even if you’re
not yet published. Contests are great. You can also commit to
your own deadlines. Write them down. Challenge a fellow author
to complete a novel by a certain date. Writing goals down and
making them public really does help.
Choose your quotes carefully. Journalists will condense an interview
that may have lasted fifteen minutes or an hour into a few words
or lines. The quotes they choose are those that best represent
the character and point of view of the person being interviewed
- and, of course, the words that make the reader want to find
out more. This is a great skill for romance dialogue. Don’t
let your characters ramble on the way people do in real life.
Get to the good stuff. Journalists also pay attention to body
language, facial expression, and listen to what’s not being
said as well as what is. Start paying attention to unspoken communication,
especially when someone is in conflict or under stress.
Write the right word. Words are the tools of our trade. Keep
your vocabulary in top working order and try to choose the best
word for the context. Also, remember, these are words not the
crown jewels. Editors will edit them, and this is a good thing.
Nothing improves a good writer like a good editor.
Research pays off. Facts and significant details add enormously
to the authentic feel of a novel. And don’t overlook the
local newspaper for story ideas.
Nancy Warren (who), a former journalist (what), went back to
the newsroom for a Temptation, Duets trilogy set in rival newspaper
offices. HOT OFF THE PRESS is a February (when) Temptation, and
will be followed in April by A HICKEY FOR HARRIET and A CRADLE
FOR CAROLINE, a Double Duets.