Lesbian Romance Fiction – My Top Writing Tips

Are you a budding sapphic romance author? Then these top romance writing tips might help you on your route to success!

Top Tips – So what makes a good sapphic romance?

Writing Lesbian Romance Fiction – My Top Tips

Publishing my debut novel Highland Fling has been a fantastic learning process for me. When I think of writing lesbian romance, I now have the following writing tips to keep in mind –

  • Have a clear focus – on the two characters falling in love. It’s all about them. With their story fully resolved.
  • Develop main characters you can admire or be attracted to – Readers want characters they can invest emotionally in. Basically if they’re not fanciable in some way readers are not likely to care. You want readers to fall in love with your MCs!
  • Include Conflict – both internal (what they’re thinking), and external (what they do) – it’s the energy that drives the story.
  • Ensure a happy ending – Most readers expect that despite all of the agonies or uncertainties on the characters’ road to love, there will be a happy ending, that their feelings are safe in the writer’s hands.
  • It’s all about sexual tension – the will-they-won’t-they element – instill enticing, engaging cues to sexual attraction and longing.

And, as I have been asked to select my golden rule for a writing lesbian romance fiction, it would be this – write from the heart, put into the story what it feels like to long for someone, to fall for someone, the uncertainty, the self-doubt, the blissful agony of it all…

Are you a budding author of lesbian romance fiction? Check out these top tips for successful romance writing.
(Bold Strokes Books Authors: L-R I Beacham, Anna Larner, Rebecca Buck)

Writing Sapphic Romance – Short Stories vs Novels?

Let’s have a think for a moment about what we mean by a short story, and what we mean by a novel – the clue to everything is word limit. If we use Bold Strokes Books guidelines – a recent call for submissions for a short story collection asked for stories between 2,000 – 5,000 words; and novels, well they start from 45,000 words upwards, depending on the genre.

So with a novel, averaging say 85,000 words, how do you keep your reader gripped for so long? How do you build in the depth that’s needed? How do you write a story that will stay with the reader forever from just the seed of an idea? And if you’ve only got 5,000 words, how do you tell your story fully? You’re going to need to grab the reader quickly –how do you do that? Does it mean you can only focus on one or two characters? And how do you manage without the space for a back story? How do you get depth without depth?

The joy of a short story

But is the joy of a short story, that it’s not a novel? You can experiment perhaps, try out a new genre, a different voice, explore a new character, work on impregnating your sapphic fiction with meaning in every word. Do the restrictions actually make you free?

The joy of a novel

And the novel, do you get to live another life through the expansive canvas offered to your characters? Do you have the room to say just what you want to say, no restrictions, another kind of freedom? As a novelist are you thrilled that your sapphic romance books will keep your reader reading far too late, night after night, after night, after night..?

Bold Strokes Books LGBTQ+ Authors attending the 2016 book festival
Bold Strokes Books Festival
(Authors L-R Brey Willow, David Swatling, Lesley Davis, Christian Baines, Rebecca Buck, Charlie Cochrane, Matt Bright, Amy Dunne, Robyn Nyx)
(L-R Jane Fletcher, Michelle Grubb, I Beacham, Anna Larner)

Anna Larner is a Bold Strokes Books Author and has written more top writing tips for the sapphic genre which you might find some of the information useful and a helpful step on your author journey!

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