Bartun
Friendly Saurian Neighbor
- Joined
- Dec 9, 2020
- Messages
- 1,178
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- 153
I don't think that's true. Some of the best romances were written by women, and so were the worst. Female authors on average have more dating experience than male authors, but this doesn't necessarily translate into better books. Just take a look at "50 Shades of Grey" for example.
There are excellent romance writers around, both male and female, and I think in order to write a good romance first you need appealing characters. If the MCs are the stereotypical flat empty characters of course their romance will seem forced and unnatural, that's also why in some series the background characters have more chemistry than the protagonists.
But if your MCs are rounded, fleshed out, well-developed characters, each with their own dreams and goals, and if there is good chemistry and tension between them, the resulting romance can be thrilling, exciting to watch, and you will soon find yourself rooting for them. The timing is also important because making the character fall too soon comes as rushed, but if the author keeps pushing the romance further only to lead to nothing is a sure way to piss off your audience.
There are excellent romance writers around, both male and female, and I think in order to write a good romance first you need appealing characters. If the MCs are the stereotypical flat empty characters of course their romance will seem forced and unnatural, that's also why in some series the background characters have more chemistry than the protagonists.
But if your MCs are rounded, fleshed out, well-developed characters, each with their own dreams and goals, and if there is good chemistry and tension between them, the resulting romance can be thrilling, exciting to watch, and you will soon find yourself rooting for them. The timing is also important because making the character fall too soon comes as rushed, but if the author keeps pushing the romance further only to lead to nothing is a sure way to piss off your audience.