But is it love? (Jennifer R. Hubbard)

My first book, The Secret Year, was definitely about loss, but was it about love? This was the question I put to the classes and book groups I visited. The relationship in question was thrilling and intense, but it was also secretive, deceptive. The two people involved didn’t always trust each other, and at times they said incredibly hurtful things. They loved many of the same things, they were on the same wavelength in many ways—and yet, they always kept a certain distance between them. They embraced their external obstacles as an excuse not to risk more, not to be more honest.




I didn’t want this to be an ideal relationship. I wanted it to be messy, complicated—like life. I wanted readers to think about the questions of what love is, what a good relationship is. I wanted them to know you can survive a relationship’s end, rough as it may be.

For me, the most interesting stories are about open-ended questions. They're about the imperfections, the trial and error, the heartbreak and healing.

Comments

  1. I read a story once where the relationship seemed too perfect, and the characters were too perfect as well. That made the story less enjoyable and interesting to me because it felt like there was hardly any conflict.

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    1. I find the territory of flawed characters having flawed relationships too rich to resist!

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  2. I love this... the trial/error...heartbreak/healing. That IS life.

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    1. I'm not great at writing heroes and role models--but cautionary tales and relatable bumblers, I can do. ;-)

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  3. Healing from a breakup is the first step in moving on before starting a new relationship

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