Showing posts with label family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label family. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 21, 2022

Pass or Pages #Query Contest Genre Reveal July 2022

 

Pass or Pages Query Contest at Operation Awesome


The genre for the July 2022 Pass or Pages is...


Family Dynamics/Family Saga fiction

Any age audience

Here are the important dates for this round:


June 28: Agent panel announcement

July 4-8: Entry window

July 25-29: Feedback shared on blog


For a recap of the rules and links to previous rounds, click here. Stay tuned for our agent panel reveal next week!

Pass or Pages poll results
This genre was voted for by 68.4% of voters in April and May.
Thank you to everyone who voted!


Monday, April 18, 2016

Family Relationships in Fiction



Good fiction tells an important story.

Great fiction draws realistic relationships and plays on tropes that don't end where you expect.

For instance, Katniss and Prim in The Hunger Games. When Katniss volunteers for the Hunger Games in Book 1, it's to protect Prim from almost certain violent death. But by the end of the series (spoiler alert) Prim is the heroine of her own story, rushing into a war-zone to protect those she deems worthy of her protection. She becomes a protector through her own nurturing way, a way that is as alien to Katniss as Peeta's incomprehensible kindness. Her character arc honors the differences between Katniss and Prim; it doesn't make her into Katniss or their mother. She is inspired by Katniss, but also shaped by her own internal voice.

In Pride and Prejudice, sibling relationships are central to the romantic plot between Darcy and Elizabeth. It is Darcy's little sister who, long before Elizabeth is even aware of her existence or importance, draws Darcy to Elizabeth as he sees her defensiveness and protectiveness of her own family. Though many characters are drawn comically--Mary with her pious studiousness and Lydia with her opposite flagrance and lack of piety--Elizabeth does not treat them as static stereotypes so neither can the reader. As she tries to teach them, sometimes gently and sometimes sharply, we see them as people capable of change and growth. Even the old father, set in his ways so long and comfortable with his escapes from five silly girls, is capable of growth and determines at the end to take a more active role in his children's upbringing while he can. His relationship with Elizabeth redeems him as a careless father because of his obvious love of her and the growth her story inspires in him.

In Their Eyes Were Watching God, Janie's grandmother arranges to marry her off at the tender age of sixteen. This seems to be done for Grandma's own peace of mind, to know Janie will be taken care of after the old woman's death. Janie never fully forgives her grandmother for this bit of selfishness, though her grandma tells her she is doing it for her own good. Such an act of desperation gives us sympathy for the grandmother at the same time we may feel shock at the decision, and especially shock at how little say Janie is given in an era when slavery has already been abolished. (spoiler alert) However, when we think that her grandmother came from slavery during the Emancipation Proclamation and was the victim of rape, having very little say in her own relationships, we understand better how her opinions about marriage and the freedom of young women were formed. Though the grandmother dies early in the story, her influence remains through the entire book as Janie experiences levels of freedom in her marriages and eventually rejects the ideas that made her grandma make that pivotal decision.

The Weasley Family from Harry Potter is my favorite family in fiction because the sibling relationships ring so true, from jokesters Fred and George trying to put their little brother under The Unbreakable Vow for a laugh, to the fierce loyalty they display to each other during the final battles of the epic saga. The parents, too, display all the characteristics and behaviors of real parents overwhelmed by raising responsible magical children on a shoe-string budget. Like most parents, they believe school is the surest road to financial success, and are horrified with the decisions their children make that take them off the well-beaten path. Then, when success comes unexpectedly, they are unduly proud as if this unorthodox living were what they wanted for their children all along. It's their foibles as much as their virtues that make them feel real to the reader.

I hope you feel inspired as you consider each of these examples of family relationships in fiction, and get some ideas for your own writing. Reading about family relationships in fiction can help us heal and forgive in our own real-life relationships. It can inspire us to change something in ourselves that we see in a relentless parent or unkind sibling.

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

A Fond Farewell

Do you ever feel like you've got so many balls up in the air that one of them will surely come crashing on your head soon? Or worse, my greater fear--that one has already been dropped and you're so crazed that you haven't even noticed?

That's my life right now. There's been a lot going on, probably no more than anyone else's life. A sick parent, work responsibilities, deadlines and a rapidly approaching move (just in time for Xmas, yay!)... But I've been feeling less adept at juggling lately, and I'm finally figuring out that I need to cut away some commitments and focus on the things that are essential.

As a result, this is my final post at Operation Awesome, which certainly doesn't mean I won't be lurking in the shadows. After all, that's what I used to do!

I want to wish you all the best in your efforts, whether you're writing, knitting, baking, or just learning to breathe. Remember to be kind to yourself, and to others. You never know what other folks are going through, and when we get super busy it's easy to forget to ask.

I hope that you all have a peaceful and calm holiday season. Thanks for letting me be a little bit more awesome for a while!

--Delancey