Article By Jami Gold

Minutes Read Time

Wedding picture of couple holding hands with text: What Makes a Romance Believable?

Okay, so I’m a week-and-a-half late for Valentine’s Day and the topic of this post. I’ll “blame” the time I put into WANACon. *smile* We had a fantastic and successful WANACon though, with great sessions on many writing-related topics, so I’ll call it a worthwhile trade.

I recently came across an interesting post at my newest favorite time-sucking website: Wait But Why. (Their posts are like a mixture of the must-click-on-another-interesting-headline obsession of Cracked.com and the insightful-look-at-humanity-and-society truths of Hyperbole and a Half. In other words, irresistible. You’ve been warned. *grin*)

Anyway, they were prepared for Valentine’s Day with a post about How to Pick Your Life Partner. Yay for them (and for us in what we can learn from it).

As the post says, happy marriages aren’t about how awesome the honeymoon is or how romantic the Valentine’s Day celebrations are. Rather, happy marriages are built on a couple’s ability to be happy with each other on a random Wednesday, over and over, for the decades they’ll spend together.

The post then goes on to share three key ingredients for couples to enjoy spending 20,000 days (50-some years) with each other: friendship, a feeling of home, and determination. Those ingredients echo the advice my parents (45 years and counting) give to others, so there’s probably something to those specifics.

As a romance author, I naturally wanted to explore how we could use those tips to make the relationships of our stories more believable. But even if you’re not into romance stories, check out the Wait But Why post—if you dare. *snicker*

Making Readers Believe in a Happily-Ever-After Ending

I should note that many of these characteristics won’t be in place for a couple during the story. Friction and secrets and arguments are all things creating the conflict we need in our stories.

However, by the end of the story, if we want the reader to believe that this couple will survive the divorce statistics and experience their happily-ever-after (HEA) promised on the last page, we should see resolution for many of the issues. Or we should see at least enough progress that we know they’re serious about working out their differences.

#1: An Epic Friendship

An epic friendship means that the couple genuinely enjoys their time together. They don’t suffer from boredom when they’re with each other.

Do we see the hero and heroine*:

  • sharing a sense of humor?
    Not every story has to include witty characters, but whatever their sense of humor is should be compatible. If one’s making jokes under pressure and the other disrespects that trait as flippancy (and there’s no new understanding by the end of the story), that’s a problem.
  • having fun together?
    We should see them making the best of bad situations when they’re together. Whether fighting the bad guy or a traffic jam, our couple should strengthen each other and seem better together than apart.
  • respecting each other’s way of thinking?
    We should see the couple be able to share their thoughts with each other and not be belittled or shot down for them.
  • sharing interests, activities, and people preferences?
    Couples don’t need to have everything in common, but they should share enough that we know they won’t be living completely separate, parallel lives. By the end of the story, we should see enough compromise that we trust they’ll come to a happy medium on the remainder of the issues.

*  or whatever combination the relationship entails

#2: A Feeling of Home

This ingredient primarily encompasses the sense of the couple being comfortable with either other. They should be natural and real with each other and not hiding behind a mask.

Do we see the hero and heroine share:

  • a sense of trust and security?
    The characters shouldn’t walk on eggshells around each other, wondering what’s going to set off the other one. They also shouldn’t have secrets or suspicions between them anymore.
  • natural chemistry?
    We should see the couple “get” each other more often than not by the end of the story. While they might misinterpret each other at the beginning, they should be on the same “wavelength” by the final paragraph.
  • an acceptance of each other’s flaws?
    The couple should have been through enough strife that they know the other isn’t perfect. Maybe they were caught in a drenching rainstorm, maybe they had a huge argument, or maybe they’ve confronted each other’s major flaws in a life-or-death struggle. Regardless, they’ve decided that they’d rather be together than apart.
  • a positive outlook?
    We won’t believe in a HEA ending unless they both believe this relationship is real and can last. If one is pessimistic about their chances, that’s definitely going to ruin the mood. *smile*

#3: A Determination to be Good at Marriage

Whether a story ends with a marriage proposal or not, the theoretical HEA ending needs a sense of commitment from both parties. It’s hard for people to adapt from the often-self-centered single life to the need to compromise all the time. We need to believe that this couple is willing and able to do the work and make the sacrifices required.

Do the hero and heroine:

  • communicate well?
    We should see the couple working out their differences in productive ways, not just kicking them down to road to rise up again later.
  • treat each other as equals?
    Many romances include subtextual negotiations of the couple’s power dynamic. By the end of the story, we should see them valuing each other’s opinions and needs.
  • fight well?
    The vast majority of couples fight, but there’s a difference between healthy disagreements where the parties still listen to each other and destructive battles where they fight mean and dirty. We should see them avoid the latter (or at least learn to try) and aim toward the former.

Again, we don’t expect our story couples to be perfect at each of these items. But if we see them on the right path to learning and trying to reach these goals, we’ll believe they’re serious in the attempt to make the relationship work.

In romance novels, a happily-ever-after ending is the norm, and our whole story could fall to pieces if we don’t prove to the reader that this couple will beat the odds. The proof can come in outright statements of love and promises or in demonstrations of the willingness to sacrifice. (Or both.)

Together, the subtext of all these clues over the course of the story will help make that ending feel believable. And that will make for a happy reader eager for a repeat of that experience with our next book. *smile*

Do you have a favorite time-sucking site? Do you agree with Wait But Why‘s ingredients for a happy relationship? How else could we show these traits in our stories? What other tips or insights do you have in how to make a romance believable to readers?

Originally Posted on February 25, 2014

Let Me Know What You Think!

Get Email Notifications of Comments/Replies on this post
Notify me of
guest

17 Comments — Time to add yours!
oldest
newest most voted
Inline Comments
View all comments
{"email":"Email address invalid","url":"Website address invalid","required":"Required field missing"}

What Do You Want to Hear About?

Keep Up to Date with All of Jami's News

Jami’s Fiction News!

Want the inside scoop on Jami’s books and promotions? Select “New Releases and Freebies”

Jami's New Blog Posts!

Want to receive Jami’s writing-focused blog posts in your email? Select “New Blog Posts”

Your info will be used only to subscribe you to the selected newsletters and not for any other purposes. (Privacy Policy)

These emails will come from "Jami Gold | Author & Mentor" with the address: newsletter@jamigold.com

Jami’s Writing Resources!

Want to hear about new worksheets, planners, classes, etc.? Use the form below

These emails will come from "Jami Gold | Creativity Unlocked" with the address: newsletter@jamigold.com

17
0
Let me know what you think!x
()
x