It's all about the Heroes
I can’t decide what I’m more thrilled about this month. The release of my debut Blaze, DOUBLE DARE, or that Pirates of the Caribbean, At Worlds End opens this weekend (have you seen it yet?) and once again, the notoriously naughty Captain Jack Sparrow will be making women lust worldwide.
He shouldn't be, though. I mean, think about it... he's undependable, dishonest, and just a little swishy. Hardly the hunk we'd write as the hero of a romance novel.
Yet millions of women love him. And I don't think it’s simply because Johnny Depp is super-hot. It’s this character he's created that breaks all the hero rules and has grabbed our hearts. Yet as writers, if we wrote a character like that, it'd be a hard road to make it sell. Because, really, as much as we love him (and let me tell ya, I REALLY love him!), Captain Jack Sparrow isn’t really a hero. His every act is based on self-interest (well, except for one that I won’t discuss since it’d ruin the movie for anyone who is going to see it this weekend).
So what makes a hero? Its not just sex-appeal, there are actually quite a few villains who are all-out sexy. It’s not how they look, their wealth or lack thereof, or their profession. If I had to try and narrow it down, I think it all comes down to their conflict. The choices they make and their reasons for doing so. Especially if their choices are in conflict with their natural inclinations.
For instance, in DOUBLE DARE, my hero is an undercover cop who finds himself in total lust with his prime suspect. Jesse has to reconcile his suspicions, his emotional reaction to Audra and his overwhelming attraction to her with his own personal code of honor and his promised promotion. Its how he deals with the conflict, and how he empowers her in the process, that makes him a hero to me.
How about you? What makes a hero true hero material to YOU?
Just for fun, I’ll pick one random name from the responses to win a copy of DOUBLE DARE!
Labels: Double Dare, Heroes, Pirates of the Caribbean










