When I read a book, I expect the experience to be a positive one. If it isn’t, I
don’t finish the book. It usually gets tossed to the bedroom floor with a grand
flourish in the hope that husband will notice so I can rail about the
disappointment of wasting my time and money. Of course having to get out of bed
to mop up water, having knocked over my glass, sort of spoils the
moment.
Genre expectations exist for all types of books. Fans of mystery
novels expect to see a crime being solved, horror fans want to be scared
witless, readers of fantasy require an imaginative challenge and hard core sci
fi readers – ah well, I don’t get those weirdoes but that’s probably because I
was crap at physics. The requirement for a HEA in romance books has some people
rolling their eyes but what’s wrong with romance readers expecting a happy
ending? What’s wrong with anyone wanting a happy ending?
I read to be
entertained, to be removed for a while from my ordinary life on my mega-yacht
drinking champagne and be transported to a fantasy world of good looking guys. I
don’t mind if they’re alive or undead, werewolf or gargoyle, prince or pauper,
(but not zombies- I have to draw the line somewhere). But I need to know that
the world I enter will become ordered and safe and happy by the end of the book.
To be honest, I like HEA or HFN in everything I read, romance or not. That
doesn’t mean to say I don’t read books with unhappy endings, I do, though most
often by accident. It’s not something authors announce on the back page – oh by
the way, I kill off that lovely hero and leave the heroine to take poison on his
grave.
Unhappy endings are not common in romance. If I ended up in floods of tears
because one of the MCs died or walked away from love, I’d feel cheated and
annoyed. I don’t mind crying at their angst part way through and I don’t mind
crying with happiness because they end up together, though it doesn’t happen
often. The crying I mean. Readers need characters to get what they deserve. I
want the villains to receive their comeuppance. I expect the hero and heroine,
or heroes, having completed their journey and learned life’s lessons, to be
rewarded with happiness. That’s why I read romance. I want the world to be fair
and just.
So what’s the attraction of romance books when I know what’s going
to happen? If the ending is predictable, why bother reading? Because HEA isn’t
straight forward and is only a small part of the whole. We don’t know the
journey the MCs will take and if a writer is skilled enough, she or he will make
that journey so compelling we feel the happy ending is the perfect finish.
It might be the fairytale ending of marriage, 2.4 kids and a blissful ride
into old age. It might be more a HFN, the feeling of satisfaction that having
shown characters maturing during the book, the author has given them the hope of
a better life in the future. So it’s really what comes before HEA that’s
important- the journey, the learning experience, the battling through
difficulties and disappointments as the relationship grows so that the readers
feels these two or three – ooh, maybe more – characters can’t live without each
other.
How about romance books that don’t have the HEA – or at least my view
of a HEA. Gone with the Wind – is the one most commonly quoted. Rhett walks away
but we don’t know if Scarlet follows. Personally I couldn’t give a damn, my
dear. She was horrible! Remains of the Day is a great story but definitely has
an unhappy ending. Jude Deveraux’s – A Knight in Shining Armor is a time travel
romance where the hero goes back to his own time and leaves the heroine in the
present. We get a sort of HEA but the ending still niggles with me that the two
main protagonists don’t end up with each other.
I suppose I learnt a lesson
from that with my story – Power of Love, It’s the story of a woman whose boyfriend has been killed. He returns
as an angel. I never plan my stories – so I got towards the end and thought –
how am I going to keep them together? It never crossed my mind that Joe would go
off to heaven and leave Poppy to find another love. No, they had to stay
together so I made it happen. Ah, the power of the pen!
1 comment:
Ultimately, sci-fi readers want better to understand women. Each sci-fi book is just a new piece of the puzzle.
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