Romance without cliche?
My school is doing a romance writing competition and there is no cliche allowed. But that is the only way I know how to write romance. I mean, I haven't read a single book that hasn't had a bit of cliche. How are you supposed to make a romance novel without it having cliche parts?
This post was sourced from https://writers.stackexchange.com/q/26421. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
3 answers
A good way to avoid cliche in romance is to choose unusual characters as participants in the romance.
- The love poetry shared between a pair of nuclear physicists could be very romantic without being at all cliche.
- Escaped prisoners on the run from the Law might fall in love during a high tension cat-and-mouse pursuit, leading to frenzied encounters peppered with the risk of capture and betrayal.
- There is no rule that says that romance needs to involve humans. Try writing a canine or feline (or god-forbid, a mixed canine feline) relationship.
Breaking from traditional two person pairings and three person love-triangles can also be useful for avoiding cliche. A happy quintet would be ripe with odd geometries and opportunities for entertaining miscommunication.
Simply stated, if you don't want it to be cliche, make it strange.
This post was sourced from https://writers.stackexchange.com/a/26430. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
0 comment threads
That's a bit of a tough assignment, because there is no precise definition of a cliche. But you may find the advice of George Orwell in his essay "Politics and the English Language" useful. It's not about writing romance, obviously, but it is about avoiding cliche. Lazy writers, Orwell contends, write by stringing together familiar phrases that are rattling around in their heads. Often the result is opaque and frequently it is illogical as well. A good writer thinks through what they say, gets a clear picture in their mind, and then writes down what they see in their head in plain language. Thus they are describing things fully seen, not regurgitating word soup.
http://www.orwell.ru/library/essays/politics/english/e_polit/
0 comment threads
Given that you haven't given us a lot of the givens...
Not every romance is cliché. There are formulas, to be sure (c.f. Harlequin, Nicholas Sparks, Lifetime), but just because the tropes are heavily used doesn't mean you have to use them, or that they have to feel worn.
So: Pick up the nearest romance book and start making a list of the clichés. I don't have one to hand, so I'm just going to start riffing off the top of my head. These won't all necessarily be in the same story:
- Man and woman
- Meet cute
- Love at first sight
- Hate at first sight
- Mistaken identity
- Pretend relationship for the benefit of a third party
- Boy gets girl, boy loses girl, boy wins girl back
- Physical Mary Sue characteristics (heart-shaped face, vividly colored eyes, perfect physique [particularly without any effort like constant dieting or exercise], flowing/tousled hair)
- Person A is normally eloquent and intelligent but gets stupidly tongue-tied in the presence of Love Interest Person B
- Sassy Black/Gay Best Friend
You get the idea. So write down everything you can see in this romance in your hand.
Then make an effort to write something which avoids as many of those as possible. Make it a same-sex slow burn. Have no jealous exes or disapproving parents. Create normal, rounded friends. Describe ordinary-looking people. And so on. Brokeback Mountain is a heartbreakingly beautiful romance which I wouldn't describe as clichéd, even if it has "love at first sight" and "disapproving society" because it's fresh and uniquely done.
If you're worried about clichés, don't write them.
0 comment threads