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How I Come Up With Book Titles in Every Genre I Write
Titles are my first flirtation with a story — the doorway, the dare, the whispered you want to see what’s inside, don’t you? And every genre pulls a different version of me forward. Rom-com titles get my wink and chaos. Paranormal romance demands teeth and danger. Contemporaries ask for pulse and intimacy. Romantic mysteries want secrets. And romantasy? Magic braided with longing. This is how I shape the first words that set the whole world in motion.
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Dec 9, 20252 min read


How I Focus & What My Writing Setup Looks Like: How I Drop Into My “I’m Untouchable Right Now” Zone
I don’t tumble into my writing zone; I ease into it—slow, intentional, like sinking into a hot bath until my thoughts stop sprinting without me. I tune the mood, limit the world, hit a few micro-rituals that trick my brain into creativity, and then let obsession drag me straight into the scene that’s burning hottest. It’s not about discipline. It’s alignment, atmosphere, and falling in love with the story until it pulls me under.
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Dec 9, 20252 min read


How YOU Can Create Your Characters: How My Characters Actually Show Up
For me, characters don’t arrive politely. They show up like trouble — loud, messy, magnetic — and immediately start arguing with me about who they are.
I don’t build them from a checklist. I meet them.
A spark, a contradiction, a desire they can’t hide — that’s all it takes. From there, it’s pressure, emotion, and chaos until they sharpen into people who feel real enough to walk off the page and demand I write them right.
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Dec 9, 20252 min read


Create A Moment Where A Character Does Something Impulsive Because Of Attraction, And It Changes Everything: The Impulsive Kiss That Changes Everything
She wasn’t supposed to want him — and she definitely wasn’t supposed to kiss him. But one laugh, one look, one spark too many, and impulse took the wheel. Now that single reckless kiss has shifted everything between them… and there’s no going back.
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Dec 9, 20252 min read


Write A Flash Scene Where A Character’s Confession Is Interrupted — Leaving Both Of Them In Suspense: The Confession That Gets Interrupted
He finally gathered the courage to confess — the words right there on his tongue, the moment charged and breathless — when a knock at the door cracked it all open. And the worst part? The person interrupting was the one man who could stop the confession cold.
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Dec 9, 20252 min read


Describe A Character Who Is Drawn To Someone Purely Because They’re Forbidden Or Unattainable: The Ache of Wanting Someone You Can’t Have
She knew he was off-limits — the kind of man wrapped in rules, vows, and consequences — and that should’ve been enough to keep her away. Instead, the warning felt like a dare, and every careful, controlled glance he gave her only made the forbidden pull burn hotter.
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Dec 9, 20252 min read


Write From The Perspective Of Someone Observing Their Crush From Afar, Noticing The Small Details That Make Them Ache: Watching Your Crush From Afar — And Noticing Every Little Thing
They’re across the room, completely unaware, and somehow every tiny, ordinary habit they have feels like a secret meant just for you. You don’t fall for their smile or their voice — you fall for the way they chew pens, roll their sleeves, and tuck their hair behind their ear like they’re fighting a losing battle.
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Dec 9, 20252 min read


Create A Moment Where A Character Tries To Walk Away From Love, But The Other Person Refuses To Let Them Go: The Moment They Try to Walk Away… and Someone Refuses to Let Them
She swears she isn’t running — but her steps say otherwise. And when he catches her wrist and asks her to tell him she doesn’t love him… she realizes leaving was never actually an option.
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Dec 9, 20252 min read


Write A Scene Where A Character Is Caught Between Duty And Desire — They Want Someone, But It’s Complicated: Torn Between Duty and Desire
He wasn’t supposed to want her — not when duty demanded distance. But when she steps close enough to shatter every rule he clings to, he realizes the real danger isn’t choosing her… it’s pretending he hasn’t already.
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Dec 9, 20252 min read


Describe A Character Receiving A Message Or Letter That Changes How They Feel About Someone Instantly: The Letter That Changes Everything
She wasn’t expecting a message from him—especially not a handwritten letter that cracked open everything she thought she knew. One confession, one truth, and suddenly her heart is shifting in ways she swore it wouldn’t.
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Dec 9, 20252 min read


Write A Short Piece Where Two People Almost Kiss… But Something Stops Them At The Last Second: The Kiss That Almost Happens
They were close enough to share breath — the kind of almost-kiss that lives in the space between want and fear. He leaned in, she forgot how to breathe… and then her phone rang, shattering everything they weren’t ready to say.
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Dec 9, 20252 min read


Write A Scene Where Someone’s Jealousy Slips Through, And The Other Person Notices But Doesn’t Call It Out: When Jealousy Slips Through (And Someone Pretends Not to Notice)
He swears he’s not jealous, but the tight fists, sharp tone, and the way he inserts himself into her conversation say otherwise. She notices every tell—but instead of calling him out, she lets the truth hang softly between them.
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Dec 9, 20252 min read


The Seductive Pull: The Essence of Essential Romantic Fiction
There’s something a little reckless about the way a good romance novel steals me. One minute I’m promising myself a single chapter, and the next I’m fully gone—heart thudding, breath caught, completely at the mercy of fictional tension.
That’s what essential romantic fiction does best: it seduces quietly.
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Nov 17, 20253 min read


Discovering Romantic Fiction Genres Guide
Romantic fiction isn’t just one genre — it’s a kaleidoscope of emotions, worlds, and ways to fall in love. From slow-burn small-town stories to dangerous paranormal passions, every subgenre offers its own flavor of desire. Let’s wander through the garden of romance together — and maybe find the story you were meant to write.
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Nov 8, 20254 min read
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