Isabel Sharpe | My Two Hats
During a recent newspaper interview, the reporter made an observation that completely surprised me: “Your romance books are about finding men while your women’s fiction novels are about getting away from them.” Huh? I started to write women’s fiction because I had stories to tell that didn’t fit the romance mold, but I’d never thought about it in that light.
Romance novels portray a beautiful fantasy—the forever joining of two souls meant to be together. Since I’m a divorcée it’s pretty obvious that fantasy didn’t work out for me. (And given my bad date stories it might never. Tip for men—during that first-impression conversation, leave out mentioning throwing up your dinner, ripping your underwear with too-long toenails or seeing your 85-year-old father’s naked buttocks.)
That said, I don’t consider my women’s fiction to be a celebration of ditching men, but a celebration of women taking charge of their lives, of stepping off the martyr train and striking out for a destination of their choosing. I could have written about women quitting bad jobs or leaving dull towns but relationships are more important to women and involve more of their identities, thereby giving me the chance to tell a deeper story.
My Harlequin Blaze, INDULGE ME (out this month), is a romantic romp in which my heroine Darcy Wolf pursues wild times and total freedom but finds Tyler Houston instead. July brings my next women’s fiction book, AS GOOD AS IT GOT (Avon/HarperCollins), a dark comedy about three very different characters who meet at a coastal Maine retreat for “suddenly single” women. You can check out excerpts of INDULGE ME and my February 2007 women’s fiction book, WOMEN ON THE EDGE OF A NERVOUS BREAKTHROUGH at my website, http://www.isabelsharpe.com/. Happy reading!
Isabel
Labels: harlequin, Isabel Sharpe, novels, Romance
7 Comments:
Hey Isabel,
I read WOMEN ON THE EDGE OF A NERVOUS BREAKTHROUGH and totally loved it. I can't wait for AS GOOD AS IT GOT.
Sounds like you've had a few dates from Hell. When I was newly divorced and dating again the near misses were worse the bad dates. The bad dates you can just write off as wasted time, but the ones were you're starting to like the guy and then he just doesn't completely out of left field are the ones that jerk your heart around.
Hang in there. There are second chances at love if you want them.
Lori
Hmmm -- do we want men, or do we want to get away from them? Sometimes both! It's a balance, isn't it, between a desire for independence and a desire for love. The luckiest of us find it with the right man. And the rest -- hey that's what great books are for! And both these books do sound good!
Cindi
Hi Isabel!
I'm one of your biggest fans, and I wanted to say anyone who hasn't read your romances or your women's fiction books are missing out on some fabulous reads.
That said, I also want to salute you for being able to write both.
I love a happy ending as much as everyone else, but there are times when I like to read about women who don't equate happiness simply with finding the man of their dreams.
So bravo to you for giving us a little of both. :)
Can't wait to read "As Good As It Got" - like Lori, I LOVED "Women on the Edge."
Candy
Hi, Isabel!
LOL on the dating stories! Those must be some undustrial-strength toenails*g*.
Re. romance vs. women's fiction, I think you're right. That reporter was looking at things in a too-simplistic manner. These are two very different kinds of stories. A romance, by definition, is about two people falling in love. Women's fiction is about empowering women -- or rather, women empowering themselves.
As a writer, I bet it rejuvenates your work to be able to alternate between the two. Looking forward to reading AS GOOD AS IT GOT!
Natale
Isabel:
I'm a huge fan of both types of fiction you write. That reporter had a bit of a point. But the real point is that your books are fabulous reads in both genres.
Please keep writing both!
Trish
Isabel!! I'm so glad I found your blog because I've been waiting for your new books to finally come out, and now I know the wait's almost over!
As far as romance and finding men, I personally think that in most romance novels the women don't set out to fall in love, in fact, the men who come into their lives are pretty much a conflict in itself, no matter what kind of romance novel. It's just that in Women on the Edge (one of my all time favorites) and other forms of women's fiction, you have the freedom to tell your story with more depth and more stories within the story, since they're longer than a shorter romance. True love will usually always win, however, the road getting there is always conflicted, no matter whether it's labeled women's fiction or romance. Bonnie
Hi Isabel!
You know I've been an Isabel Sharpe fan for, well, forever! :) No matter which you're writing, romance or women's fiction, your books always pack an emotional punch. I'm looking forward to AS GOOD AS IT GOT!
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