WELCOME TO MY WORLD - Paula Graves

I suppose a lot of readers, when they think of world-building in fiction, think of fantasy realms and science fiction universes, where all the rules have changed. Why would contemporary romance writers need to build new worlds when they have the real world as their canvas?

But fictional worlds are made up of more than soil and sky, governmental entities and fantastical creatures. They're made up of people, relationships, power-struggles and alliances, too. And that's true of contemporary, "real world" fiction as well. The stories we love as readers--and love to write as writers--create worlds of connections and conflicts that seem as real to us as the world in which we live.

My first three novels for Harlequin Intrigue, FORBIDDEN TERRITORY, FORBIDDEN TEMPTATION and FORBIDDEN TOUCH, took place in a contemporary world where paranormal gifts were a reality. The three Browning sisters, Lily, Rose and Iris, each had a special gift that put her in danger--and thrust her into contact with the man who would become the love of her life. These characters had histories, connections and conflicts that fleshed out the present-day world of their stories.

Though I'm personally skeptical of the paranormal, I tried hard to make the three sisters and their gifts seem utterly grounded in reality. They struggled with their abilities, with scorn and disbelief. They suffered painful consequences for using the paranormal abilities they'd been given. Had I given them gifts that always worked smoothly and didn't have negative aspects, I don't think the world I created in those books would have seemed believable. The real world is full of obstacles, a rollercoaster ride of gains and losses, joys and sorrows. For fictional worlds to seem real, they must share those same aspects.

With my next series, the Cooper Justice books coming from Harlequin Intrigue starting January 2010, I created an even more far-flung but interconnected fictional world where the events in foreign lands have real-life consequences. I used a country I'd created in FORBIDDEN TOUCH, the war-torn Central Asian republic of Kaziristan, to flesh out the back story of Sam Cooper of my February 2010 book, CHICKASAW COUNTY CAPTIVE. By grounding Sam in a world I've already created, I retain the ability to connect characters from that other series to the current series if I want.

The first Cooper Justice book, CASE FILE: CANYON CREEK, WYOMING, goes a step further, taking a secondary character from my stand-alone book, COWBOY ALIBI, and giving him his own story. I was able to revisit some characters I'd loved in my previous book and see where they were in their lives after the Happily Ever After, and I was also able to flesh out the tragic back story I'd given the character of Riley in that previous book, offering him closure and the hope of new love.

Readers sometimes wonder why writers love to write series and interconnected stories. I think it's because the characters and worlds we're creating when we write a series become real and beloved to us. I think readers often feel the same way. When the heroes kiss and the book ends, readers aren't quite ready to say goodbye to those people and their world, any more than we writers are.

So, how about you? Do you like interconnected books? What elements of series work for you, and what elements don't work? I'd love to hear what you have to say.

Comment on this blog and you could win a copy of COWBOY ALIBI.

http://www.paulagraves.com/
http://spinstersandlunatics.blogspot.com/

COOPER JUSTICE - coming from Harlequin Intrigue in 2010
Case File: Canyon Creek, Wyoming - January 2010
Chickasaw County Captive - February 2010

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Sorry for the delay.

Sorry for the delay. ALICIA0605. You are the winner of Cowboy Alibi. Please send your contact information to susan(at)writerspacemail(dot)com.

Was a winner ever picked for

Was a winner ever picked for this book?

I love interconnected

I love interconnected stories. I like how characters that are introduced in the first book, get their own book. Your book sounds great. Love the cover.

I agree with Alicia0605, I

I agree with Alicia0605, I enjoy reading interconnected books that have different leads, but I like when the leads from previous books are still important in future books. I also like when all the problems arent solved in one book but it turns in to a goal that is finally acheived through out a series.

I forgot to answer the

I forgot to answer the question. I love interconnected books but I like for the books to have different lead characters.

I love contemporary Romance.

I love contemporary Romance. I think that it would be just as challenging to write as urban fantasy maybe even more so because you have to make the ordinary seem interesting. Thanks for the post!! I'm looking forward to reading your work!