Can I be a Co-Writer
A Co-Writer Spills the Beans!
In my upcoming release, Luckless Love, my heroine is returning from a year long road trip and searching for someplace to belong. Wanting to belong to a community is a universal theme that I think appeals to readers, but when I started to write the book, I didn’t immediately leap to that theme. I had to explain my reasoning for using it to my co-writer—Juel Lugo.
Luckless Love started out during COVID when Juel who is my business partner in real life and I took a script writing seminar on how to write a Hallmark movie. We both felt that we could write one, and with too much time on our hands and since we were in each other’s COVID pods, we gathered around a computer and took notes on how to write a Hallmark movie.
What Are Your Co-Writer Goals?
Juel is not particularly interested in being an author. She doesn’t want to do the work of putting words on a page, but she is endlessly interested in stories and structure. As a life-long reader, and marketing expert, she knows that stories are what move the human psyche. So our deal was that she would do the bulk lifting on inventing the plot. I would walk her through how to outline and then I would do the actual writing. But that meant that we had endless discussions on our characters, their motivations and how to get them to fulfill their plot obligations.
I don’t know how other co-authors work together, but with over ten years of experience in working with each other, we managed to make it through the outline with very little disagreement. Having both taken the seminar we both could recognize when we were deviating from the Hallmark pattern. And then we could also agree when we were fine with leaving that path. Hallmark has a lot of constraints about how serious or realistic things can be (don’t mention divorce or cancer!), which is understandable for their brand, but for writing a novel it can feel like the characters are lacking in depth.
Did We Make it the End?
Are you wondering if you can be a co-writer? Absolutely! You just have to know that you won’t always get your way. And it really helps if you know your partner before embarking on the project. My top tip is to make sure you have project goals in mind and then, when there is a disagreement you can compare your wants against the project goals.
So did we make it through the writing process with our friendship and partnership intact? Absolutely. It was a fantastically distracting project during a time when we very much needed one. It was also fun to take on a challenge that neither of us had done before. The script version achieved a PNWA Literary Contest Finalist ranking and we are quite proud of our little romance novel. We’re looking forward to it’s upcoming release on November 18. Check out the links below if you’re also interested in a sweet romance, all about wine, second chances and finding some place to call home.
AMAZON: https://amzn.to/4dfmAO6
GOODREADS: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/216958888-luckless-love
Learn more: bethanymaines.com/romance/
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Bethany Maines is the award-winning author of action-adventure and fantasy tales that focus on women who know when to apply lipstick and when to apply a foot to someone’s hind end. She participates in many activities including swearing, karate, art, and yelling at the news. She can usually be found chasing after her daughter, or glued to the computer working on her next novel (or screenplay). You can also catch up with her on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and BookBub.