How To

How to Write an Outline for a Romance Novel

Contributor
By eHow Contributing Writer
(7 Ratings)

If you have ever dreamed of writing a romance novel, you should understand the importance of outlining your idea first. Outlining your romance novel allows you to plan a journey for your characters. When you outline a novel, it forces you to think about the logistics and can help you further develop your plot and subplots.

Difficulty: Moderately Challenging
Instructions

    Do Your Research

  1. Step 1

    Before you begin writing your romance novel, do a thorough job researching the novel's background.

  2. Step 2

    Research everyday life, customs and cultures of the era for historical romance novels.

  3. Step 3

    Study every aspect of your story location, characters' background, occupations and hobbies for a contemporary romance novel.

  4. Step 4

    Organize your research in three-ring binders by topic (occupation, history, clothing, for example).

  5. Plot the Big Events of Your Romance Novel

  6. Step 1

    List the major events or milestones of your novel, such as the first time the hero and heroine meet, kiss and fight on a blank piece of paper.

  7. Step 2

    Make another list, either on the same piece paper or a separate piece, of other events that help connect the major events. These will be the basis of your subplots.

  8. Step 3

    Type up a copy of your rough outline.

  9. Organize Your Outline by Chapters

  10. Step 1

    Organize your big and small events by chapters. A standard romance novel has 15 to 20 chapters, with about 20 pages per chapter.

  11. Step 2

    List the characters who are in each chapter, the time and date it takes place and the location at the start of each chapter. This will help you further flesh out the chapter as you write.

  12. Step 3

    Make notes at the end of each outlined chapter of what information you need to further research or what characters or scenes you need to work on.

  13. Step 4

    Check each chapter to make sure it has a purpose. It should either help advance the main plot (getting the hero and heroine together), give information about characters or help set the scene for an upcoming big event. This will help you avoid including "filler" material.

Tips & Warnings
  • Remember, an outline is not set in stone. You can always go back and change it, if you find something isn't working.

Comments  

juliesam3 said

Flag This Comment

on 10/23/2007 This is a great article. I am currently writing a romantic suspense novel and my writing was not making the story go the way that wanted, now following these steps is starting to come along! Thanks!

Post a Comment

Post a Comment
  • Have you done this? Click here to let us know.
I Did This

Related Ads

Get Free Arts & Entertainment Newsletters

Copyright © 1999-2009 eHow, Inc. Use of this web site constitutes acceptance of the eHow Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.   en-US

Demand Media
eHow_eHow Arts and Entertainment