Subject: When romance shows who a character is.
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Posted on: 2014-03-29 23:37:00 UTC

I'm not really into romantic stuff, but some of the books I've read have had romantic subplots that fit in very nicely--not wedged in sideways, but growing naturally from who the characters are, and how they interact with each other. In these stories, romance is one of many things going on, and it serves a purpose in the plot, to show the reader more about who they are. Sometimes it creates complications when someone can't keep their wits about them because they're too in love; sometimes it means that the romantic relationship gets tangled up in the career or the quest and makes things more difficult. Sometimes it makes things easier because people who are in love can support each other and back each other up, just like close friends or siblings would.

I don't like stories that focus entirely on the relationship, as though that's the only thing going on in the characters' lives, like everything but the couple is either an antagonist trying to break them up, or else no more than scenery. That's ridiculous and unrealistic and, even without any particularly bad writing, is very likely to cause me to find something else to read. Romance in a living, changing environment, where it's only one of many things going on, though--that can be pretty cool.

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