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The Kdrama Cure
Kdrama Cure
Mind Blowing Secrets to Writing Your #1 Best Selling Romance Novel - No Kdrama Experience Required!
Marie Cole
Copyright 2021 by Marie Cole
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
Dedication
To my daughters, friends and closest supporters. Thank you for listening to me talk for hours about how much I adore Korean dramas and giving me the support I needed to complete this project.
To the writers, directors, producers, actors and everyone behind the scenes whose hard work and talent helped me get through my darkest hours.
To all past, present and future Kdrama fans. You are my tribe. Saranghae!
And lastly to romance authors who keep the dream of happily ever after alive.
Contents
Introduction
Hello fellow authors and aspiring authors! Thank you for checking out this book! If you are reading this intro in the book preview to see if its a good fit for you you may be asking: Is this book for me? Who exactly will benefit from this book?
This book is for anyone who is interested in learning. More specifically anyone who is interested in writing romance for fun or for publishing, whether thats self-publishing or traditional publishing.
My hope is that you find multiple ways to use the Kdrama Cure. And that this book is a resource you come back to again and again. Inside you will find fixes for some of the most common romance writing problems including character development, low or no tension, weak chapter endings, and even some tricks to deal with writers block.
In the author community, there are two distinct categories that authors fall into: plotters and pantsers. Just in case you don't know, plotters are writers who like to think about their story and write down an outline for how the story will flow before they sit down to write. And on the opposite side of the spectrum are pantsers who do no story planning on paper. They write "by the seat of their pants."
The Kdrama Cure will work equally well for both kinds of writers. If you are a plotter, you can apply the Kdrama Cure at the beginning of your writing process. Before you sit down to write out your story's beats, you can make sure all of the elements are filled out. The Kdrama Cure is basically a set of guidelines for what you should brainstorm to get the romance out of your head and onto the paper for the readers to fully enjoy. Alternatively, if there are some aspects of plotting that come quickly, a plotter can do their regular plotting, and then when they come to an area that they are stuck or always forget, they can come back to the Kdrama Cure and fix what's missing.
For pantsers, the Kdrama Cure can be used more fluidly. Some pantsers just start writing and write their manuscript in order, starting with chapter one. Some write out of order and then try to piece it all back together. Some writers do character work before writing their story, and some allow the characters to reveal themselves through the story. As a pantser, the Kdrama Cure can come in at any time during the writing process and may even be saved for the editing stage before the book is submitted to your editor.
We will get into the details of how you can use the different elements later on, but for right now, I want you to accept that there is no right or wrong way to use this method. Some of the cures won't apply to you. Some of the cures you may use early on in your draft, and others may not come in until the end. If you are using the Plot Cure, you may be using it throughout, especially as a pantser.
Whatever your process, I hope the Kdrama Cure is helpful to you.
Okay, so now you know who the Kdrama Cure is for, but how did this thing even come about?
In the summer of 2019, my marriage exploded when I saw a text of a huge soapy woman's naked chest on my husband's phone. This was the tip of his cheating, lying iceberg, and the hurt and betrayal I felt as a result sent me into a mild depression as I worked through the grief of the loss of my fifteen-year relationship and thirteen-year marriage.
It took me a couple of really hard, tear-filled months and lots of therapy to get myself to a place where I could think about anything else other than the fact that my marriage was over. I found myself trying to find an escape, and everything on Netflix would trigger something for me because most of what was on the screen contained white men and white women. How could I watch a romance with a white man as the lead when it reminded me of my husband and what a selfish, unfaithful man he was? He ruined Hallmark Christmas romances for me that year. And the last thing I wanted to watch was sex or anything eluding to sex. I didnt want to see exposed boobs or even cleavage. It was all too triggering.
Enter: Korean Dramas.
The characters were Korean. They spoke a different language. The settings were familiar and yet foreign. As I soaked in my first three Kdramas, I was learning about a different culture. One where there were levels of respect that were very different from American culture. I was basically escaping to Korea and getting lost, and I loved every single moment of it and went back for more.
The more Kdramas I watched, the more I wanted to analyze them, especially after watching Boys Over Flowers. This drama is so many things, but what amazed me was how they took this unlikable rich guy and turned him into a dude worthy enough to be with the kick-ass, not-taking-shit-from-anybody heroine. The push and pull displayed were incredible and one of the things I love most about the Kdrama.
And so it began. I studied and analyzed. I started breaking down the elements, trying to string together similar things I saw amongst the Kdramas I'd seen. I Googled "How to Write a Korean Drama" in English, and when that failed to produce results, I also Googled it in Korean. Some things came back in Korean, but because I don't read Korean, and Google translate can only take you so far I wasnt able to come away with much. But I was determined to get the most out of the Kdramas and apply what I loved the most in Kdramas to writing the genre I love the most: romance.
So if you're ready to learn, keep reading. My promise to you is that this book is void of unnecessary fluff. If you can take away even one thing and apply it to your craft, I will consider it a win. And if you start binging Kdramas in your spare time, then I have definitely won (and youre welcome!) Start with Crash Landing on You, the wildly successful Kdrama of 2020 that was streamed in the US by Netflix. You will both thank and curse me for the journey you'll be embarking on into the wonderful world of Hallyu.
Character Cures
I recently asked my editor some questions about what she saw as common flaws between all of the manuscripts she received. She mentioned characters, side characters, the romantic arc, and the settingbasically - all the things. So if you have had these comments come back from your own editor, I want to let you know that, firstly, you are not alone. You dont suck! And you shouldnt throw in the towel forever. These are usual things. And secondly, we can fix it!
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