Happy Valentine's Day! #WhenBlackWomenFall
Happy Valentine's Day!
All around the world, couples are celebrating the power of love. In fact, many celebrate it differently. Here is an article on the different traditions of Valentine's Day around the world. For me, as a romance author, I get to write about love all the time and it's the best job. This month, I teamed up with several fellow romance authors on a blog tour highlighting black heroines falling in love. As part of the tour, we've put together a sample book of our featured stories. Be sure to check it out and join the tour!
Then, check out this wonderful blog post by author Kim Golden on her experiences in writing about (and finding) love the unconventional way...
Maybe...Love: Love in Translation
by Kim Golden
When I first wrote about Laney in Maybe Baby, I had no idea
that she would demand more stories. I never intended for Maybe Baby to become a
series. I only knew I wanted to tell the story of a black woman from the States
who--like me--happened to live in Scandinavia and who happened to fall in love.
But, unlike me, Laney wasn't in love with the man she was with. Laney wanted something more. She thought she
wanted a baby. What she really wanted was to find the person who was meant to
complete her. And this journey is the story I tell in Maybe Baby. How she meets
and falls in love with Mads, who is also searching and feeling just as lost as
Laney.
Over the course of three books (Maybe Baby, Maybe Tonight and
Maybe Forever), I've charted their love story. Not everyone appreciates it.
Some people are put off by the infidelity angle and it prevents them from
seeing what is the heart of the story: two people searching for and finding
love, just maybe not in the best of ways. Infidelity ends up figuring into a
lot of my writing. Not because I condone it. It's more that I am interested in
what makes people cheat. And how they deal with the consequences of it.
Once I'd finished tweaking Maybe Baby, I received advice that
it would be easier to sell if Laney were white or if I changed the setting from
Scandinavia to somewhere more palatable for American tastes like Paris or
London or even New York. But that wasn't what I wanted. And really, when I
began writing Maybe Baby, I wrote it more for me than anyone else. I didn't
want to read another story set in New York or London or Paris. I wanted to
write about looking for love in Scandinavia--especially since I live here and
know Stockholm, Sweden and Copenhagen, Denmark much better than I do Paris or
New York. Someone even suggested I change Laney to a white woman
because--"you'll sell more books that way." But I didn't want to tell a random white
woman's story. And Laney came to me as a black woman, not a white woman. I wanted to tell her story—the story of a
black woman living in Europe and trying to find that someone who would make her
feel like she'd come home.
So...I won't change the sort of characters I write about just
to please people who don't want to read about black women falling in love. And
I won't change the settings just because some people have no clue where
Scandinavia is or think that the only thing capable of being set there is a
murder mystery. I found love in Scandinavia...I found my guy who made me feel
like I'd come home. And I think there are more love stories to come that have a
connection with my Nordic home...a few more stories about Laney, her feisty
cousin Eddy...maybe even Laney's daughters once they're old enough. And I think
I'll keep writing about black women in love.
At the end of the day...it's what we all want—love.
If you’d like to read love stories outside of your comfort
zones, check out the selection of books, including Maybe Baby, on the When
Black Women Fall promo tour at http://whenblackwomenfall.com!
Kim Golden was born and raised in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
In 1995, she left the US and moved to Sweden for love with a capital L. When
she isn't writing fiction, she writes copy about perfume for a Swedish
cosmetics firm. She writes stories for people who know that love comes in every
color.
Author
links:
Twitter https://twitter.com/kimigm
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