Sunday, May 30, 2010

Why I Write Fantasy - Rowena Cherry



Welcome Rowena Cherry, whose heroes are larger than life in every way.

Amber: Why do you write fantasy?
Rowena: I write Fantasy because... I want my heroes to be larger than life in every way. The "god-Princes of Tigron" are over seven feet tall, have seven shark-like senses and genie-like powers, all are physically attractive and highly sexed, they're wealthy and powerful and intelligent and courageous and supremely competent... and royal. And faithful.

You cannot find a series-worth of heroes in any other genre (other than Fantasy) without seriously messing with real History and/or Geography, or at the least, grafting a branch that does not belong onto British Lord's family tree. Therefore, I set my self-styled, high-tech "gods" in outer space.


A few examples of things I've researched include: whether or not a woman can really shave her legs with a "razor" shell (she cannot, and I had hairy scabs on my legs to prove it); what forms have to be filled out in Britain before a grave can be exhumed and the remains exported (if a loved one is buried on Church grounds, exhumation is much less likely to be permitted); under what circumstances a Magnum (gun) might jam; the top five ways that able-bodied people unintentionally offend people who are confined to wheelchairs; and the physics and chemistry that would have to be in place for a sky to turn green.

Strictly speaking, my novels are all classified by the publisher as "futuristic romance" but readers have termed them everything from fantasy to paranormal to sfr (science fiction romance). The trouble with "futuristic" is that many readers expect futuristics to be set "in the future", but romances fall into the "futuristic" category if space travel --involving spacecraft-- and/or more technologically advanced alien societies are central to the story.


Just because I claim to write Fantasy does not mean that I make everything up. I believe there is a limit to how far a reader should have to suspend disbelief. It seems only polite and responsible to give my readers a reason to trust me, therefore, if something can be researched, then I research it.
Here's a dilemma for a futuristic series writer. What happens if one book in a "futuristic" series has no scenes featuring advanced technology and spacecraft? It never occurred to me that this could be perceived as an outrage by review-writing readers until I read a chance remark on a GoodReads.com discussion.

If I had known, I should still have written Insufficient Mating Material pretty much the way it is. Would I have taken a critical scene and relocated it on a spaceship? I honestly don't know. If my editor had requested it, perhaps so. I can be flexible. At the eleventh hour, when I saw the cover art for Insufficient Mating Material, I decided that I had to take apart one third of the novel and re-work it because I believe passionately that what is on the cover should be an illustration of a scene in the book.

There was no "From Here To Eternity" scene in the original Insufficient Mating Material, but it was obvious after seeing the cover that there had to be one. An important chess-playing scene had to be removed (the word count was already set), a beach had to be cleared of dead bodies (LOL!!!), and the ending had to change... because the original ending would have been an anti-climax after the new sex in the surf scene. It follows that if the cover artist had illustrated a wonderfully sinister, looming spaceship reminiscent of Independence Day, I should have revised the text to go with it.

Amber: Why do readers love fantasy?
Rowena: I can only answer for myself. I love to read. (Full stop!) I love Fantasy, but I also love Mystery, Suspense, Historicals, History, Anthologies, Cat books, Science Fiction... As far as I am concerned, genre labels are a bit of a nuisance.

There are many aspects of Fantasy that I appreciate very much, particularly dragons and magic (which I don't have), psychic powers (which I do have), and the potential for unusual solutions to universal problems.

What I do not appreciate in Fantasy or any other genre is when the author stretches my credulity too far, or breaks the rules they have established for their own world.

Amber: Would you write fantasy even if no one read it?
Rowena: Hah! Yes, I would, but I'd package and market it as something else.

Rowena Cherry has played chess with a Grand Master and former President of the World Chess Federation (hence the chess-pun titles of her alien romances).

She has spent folly filled summers in a Spanish castle; dined on a sheikh's yacht with royalty; been serenaded (on a birthday) by a rockstar and an English nobleman; ridden in a pace car at the 1993 Indy 500; received the gold level of the Duke of Edinburgh's Award; and generally lived on the edge of the sort of life that inspires her romances about high-living alien gods.

Rowena's Mission Statement - My goal as a Romance author is to give good value. I expect to provide my readers with six to eight hours of amusement, a couple of really good laughs, a romantic frisson or two from the sensual scenes, a thoroughly satisfying HEA, and something to think –or talk-- about when the book is finished.

Heroines get more hero than they bargain for....

Rowena's Books

The "god-Princes of Tigron" series (also dubbed "The Mating Books") was basically "three royal weddings and a murder". In the first book, a bad-boy Prince abducted the mate of his dreams who happened to be from the black sheep branch of his royal family. Prince Tarrant-Arragon was so pleased with his stolen bride, and with married life, that he decided to trick or force his two greatest enemies into politically disastrous sexual liaisons with liability wives… in other words, to his own controversial sisters.
1. Forced Mate
Buy Forced Mate direct from Dorchester
2. Mating Net (a prequel, only available as an e-book) 
Buy Mating Net direct from New Concepts Publishing
3. Insufficient Mating Material
 Buy Insufficient Mating Material direct from Dorchester
4. Knight's Fork
Buy Knight's Fork direct from Dorchester
(When you buy directly from the publisher, the author receives a bigger royalty check)





Rowena’s Contest!

$25 bookstore token
(either for EbookIsle.net or Borders bricks and mortar... 
Rowena's choice)
Awarded by random drawing to one commentator 
on Rowena's interview 
(Contest Ends - June 12th)

13 comments:

  1. Hi, Rowena! I enjoyed reading about your "larger than life in every way" heroes, and about all the different subjects that you have researched. I absolutely agree with you that the cover image must match the character description and story details contained within the book. I am quite empathetic to authors who get "stuck" with a bad cover or a cover that simply does not match the book. It's even worse when the back blurb contains incorrect information which greatly differs from the actual story line, including giving the characters a wrong name!

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  2. Thank you for being the first person to comment, Virginia.

    Oh, my goodness, I've never heard of back cover blurb that is so inaccurate that it misnames a character! I feel very fortunate that my editor has always given me the opportunity to comment on back cover blurb before it is locked in.

    IMHO, an author should never be so thrilled to be published at all that she is intimidated and does not say that copy needs work, if it needs work.

    I have heard of the three-armed heroine cover, and how brilliantly the author created buzz around that.

    Your avatar is gorgeous. I love cats!

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  3. I hadn't heard of your books before reading your post. Now that I know about them, I am anxious to read them. "Larger than life in every way" heroes...they are the type I love to read about!

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  4. Thank you for your kind words, Patsy.

    The god-Prince Tarrant-Arragon is particularly large, and if you look for my electronic version, you will see a hunk that I consider perfect.

    Mind you, his ancestor, who is the Mating Net hunk isn't bad, either.

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  5. Ha! So this is where you are while I hang out at your blog? Thanks for letting me spruik there, btw. :) Great insight with your post. I'll remember the "razor shell" thing. Ouch!

    I'm sorry you had to suffer the negative comments about "futuristic" not necessarily involving spaceships. As any good sf fan knows, there are a multitude of sub-genres, including one known as "mundane". It may be futuristic, but there's not a whiff of anything that might seem implausible. A lot of the time that would include spaceships!

    Maybe a topic you'd like to tackle is about the narrower and narrower categorisations of books. Is that necessarily a good thing?

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  6. Hey, Kaz,

    Fancy seeing you here. Maybe I missed an alert from rowenacherry.blogspot.com

    It seems that anyone with any time to blog this week is checking out J A Konrath's "Steal My Book" experiment on

    http://jakonrath.blogspot.com/2010/05/steal-this-ebook.html

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  7. [quote]Just because I claim to write Fantasy does not mean that I make everything up. I believe there is a limit to how far a reader should have to suspend disbelief. It seems only polite and responsible to give my readers a reason to trust me, therefore, if something can be researched, then I research it.[/quote]
    And I believe this is why your stories are so fascinating to read - there is an element of truth to substantiate the fantasy.

    george-allwynn-author@gmx.com

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  8. Hi, Rowena! You know I'm a fan and I love your books. Just when I think a hero can't be any yummier, you manage to write a even yummier one.

    And I love the character names, except I'm pouting that there isn't a Djacquie yet. How do you go about picking the perfect name for each character?

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  9. Rowena and Amber,

    I'm so sorry to be here so late. What an interesting post. You have lived an exciting life Rowena.

    This is the first time I've heard of an author changing a scene to fit the cover of their book. Most authors just complain because their cover doesn't fit their book.

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  10. And, the winner is PATSY.

    Patsy, please email rowena@rowenacherry.com and write "Amber's Blog" in the subject line.

    Clicking your name didn't get me to contact info.

    Thank you very much indeed to everyone who left comments.

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  11. Anonymous

    [quote][quote]Just because I claim to write Fantasy does not mean that I make everything up. I believe there is a limit to how far a reader should have to suspend disbelief. It seems only polite and responsible to give my readers a reason to trust me, therefore, if something can be researched, then I research it.[/quote]
    And I believe this is why your stories are so fascinating to read - there is an element of truth to substantiate the fantasy.

    george-allwynn-author@gmx.com [/quote]

    Thank you very much indeed.

    ReplyDelete
  12. Jacquie, thank you very much for your comment. You are right, there ought to be a Djacquie.

    I'm not really sure how I go about picking the perfect name (or names). Name picking is like whisky making. It takes a lot of time.

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  13. I haven't heard from Patsy, yet. When I do, the prize is waiting.

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