Friday 6 July 2012

STUCK IN THE MIDDLE WRAP-UP



This weeks submissions for Challenge #39 STUCK IN THE MIDDLE were awesome!!

I was a bit worried that we would have no poets this challenge, because Our criteria was slightly different in that it involved an observer to the love affair, not the couple themselves.  We should not have doubted the creative skills of our poets though:

Sally's emotionally sensitive poem stirred my social worker heart.  So often I see this scenario in my day job.  The sentiment, the adultified child, the family angst; all captured the Stuck in the Middle theme perfectly.

 Genskie is new to RFW, and her first submission was a poem of forgiveness for a father that already had a family he was stepping out on.  A poignant, evocative poem of cheating, ethics, and choices.

Adura's poetry gave a different twist to the theme with a wife/mom stuck in between her husband and his son.  The conflict was sympathetic, the emotive plot heart wrenching, and the character personalities vividly realistic.

Several of our contributors chose to submit fitting/or reworked excerpts from their published novels:

Ruth's (from a novel she is currently polishing for publication) interpretation of the theme included engaging characters and a scene plot with the stuck in the middle character as a middle-man/go between type.  And, he's a ghost, closely tied to both the lovers.  Although his realm of influence is limited, his powers of observation are clear.

Roland posted an excerpt from his latest publication New Orleans Arabesque.  Victor sacrifices himself for the love of Capt Sam and Sam's reunited wife Meilori.  Poor Sam and Alice are stuck in the middle as Meilori disapproves of Sam's son Victor, and Alice would as soon send Meilori back to the darkness that her sister captured her in for years.

Francine posted an excerpt from her novel Love Walked In, and is from the perspective of a 14 year old boy internalizing the virtues of a potential new step dad.  The poor kid had a lot of people's opinions to mull over, not to mention his own conflicted thoughts of what would make his mother truly happy, despite the discomfort of the rest of the family.

Kiru chose a snippet from her steamy novel An Engagement Challenge.  Kiru's excerpt focused on a love triangle.  A dual stuck in the middle with our lover moving on to a new relationship; but still wondering what would happen if she explored her erotic attraction to a one night stand.  Not only does Kiru introduce the conflicted emotional ties to both men, she also adds a bit of intrigue over what the relationship between the two men is prior to their connection to our displayed lover.

And of course lets not forget our contributors that reviewed the criteria (and I'll specifically NOT mention those that were over word count or posted a love triangle in any category), and created a special writing for this particular challenge:

Crystal's characters were engaging, well developed within the flash fiction and theme criteria, and displayed a unique take on the stuck in the middle theme as the prospective character is offered a viable love alternative for her "silence" after the crime family linked boyfriend has left her.  Lots of intrigue for a continuing story.

Linda (Scheherazhad) entry included a physical stuck in the middle concept as her characters embark on a surprise road trip to visit the MC absent boyfriend.  To sweeten the concept Linda placed her character as witness to her best friends cheating on their respective relationships, forcing our character to literally sit between the two to limit contact.  Hubba-hubba.

Heather's submission was told from two POVs; that of the little brother looking forward to the return of his older sister - which in turn means she will bring home her boyfriend who has become a "big brother" to our perspective character.  And also includes the internal conflicts of the Sister, as she wonders how to break the news to her family that she has broken up with someone all considered a family member.

Celeste (Weissdorn) also used the physical/emotional stuck in the middle concept with the perspective character sitting at a couples dinner, literally sitting between her best friend's new lover, and the ex.  And of course the new love is perfect, handsome, and definitely not the old love, which our perspective character remains loyal to through out the story.

Denise's excerpt was a continuation from last challenge, and showed our obsessed lover in the midst of a love triangle; desperately trying to recapture the lost love by a look-alike replacement.  And then, the ex returns . .

Donna used the perspective of a step-daughter running from her mother's house, and an argument over the ex with the new hubby; and ending up stuck in the middle of a similar argument between the step-dad and his  new love.

Rekha's excerpt explored the cultural repercussions of a break up, and the testing of loyalty according to gender and social standing.  A short but intriguing mystical look into a unique setting and circumstance.

Anna used a love triangle with a twist of having the past love unexpectedly and inconveniently appear at the moment when our lover finally gives up and moves on to a new life, and a new love.

You may have noticed I did not mention Joy (JL Campbell) as yet, and that is because I wasn't sure if her excerpt was a new writing for RFW, or if it was a sneak peak from one of her novels.  The characters were so well built, with intrigues, a past, and a present so intricately combined that I felt these characteers and their situation had to be a part of a larger work.  Our perspective character is stuck in the middle of several conflicts; his divorce proceedings from the ex, a new lover his mother doesn't approve of (mom loves the ex), and the lingering effects of the separation of his own parents on his social and  moral boundaries.

So that's a wrap for this challenge.

Our next challenge Greener Pastures on Friday, July 13, is also another complicated set up with some special rules to assist in judging the Featured Writer and Runner Up awards.  We'll post the specific judging criteria Denise and I expect to use for the FW/RU awards when we post the official announcement, but for now, you have two weeks to write, polish, and schedule your Greener Pastures excerpts using the following criteria:

 This prompt is about long-term love; perhaps suffering a mid-life or 7 year itch crisis. The couple recognizes it is time for a change; but how drastic does the change need to be to rekindle the relationship? Who wants the change; husband, wife, mutual? Who would suffer the most from either a break up, or from the status quo?

For older lovers: perhaps this is the retirement of one or both, or one is suffering a physical or mental health change.

For mid-life lovers: perhaps this could be an empty nest syndrome, or a male mid-life crisis, or female menopause.

For younger lovers: perhaps there is an unexpected pregnancy to upset the balance; or a career change –promotion or firing or company move; or the sheer boredom of routine.

What we want to see is when the romance loses it shine, and the eye wanders, but what our disgruntled lover finds so appealing in another is the qualities that the old flame has lost. Does he/she realize this on their own? Or does the jilted lover or new love point it out? How is the situation resolved? Or is it too late?

This is a special challenge, so it has special guidelines:

To be in the judging for Featured Writer, you must be a member (sign up on the thumbnail linky) and follow these guidelines:

  • Word limit is 600 words
  • Any POV - first, second, third person
  • Prose/prosetry
  • Judging will be based on the FIRST WRITING ONLY; meaning, if you edit or revise based on initial feedback, the re-write will be disqualified. Only the original will be entered into the competition. Once the link is up, it is the final submission version. It is fine to improve your piece for publication elsewhere, but for judging for FW just leave your original post up.

14 comments:

  1. It was a tough one especially trying to see the situation from another's point of view. I think all the submissions were great. I always look forward to reading everybody else's contributions.

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    1. Thanks Sally. I have been thrilled to see so many excellent writings.

      .....dhole

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  2. The entries were all awesome in there own rights, and great fun to read.

    Denise, you know I say it as I see it, and from the perspective of original co-host, and I guess I'm in the minority, nonetheless I'm finding the prompts progressively uninspiring romantically. The romantic essence of "Romantic Friday Writers" seems a little lost to the more general aspects of writing. On that basis I'm dropping out until a romantic prompt inspires a return. Sorry.

    best
    F

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    1. Glad you enjoyed reading everyone's submissions F. I am sad to see you drop out for a while, hopefully We will post something more inspiring after the Greener Pastures prompt.

      Have a good summer.

      .......dhole

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    2. Ah Francine, take your point. It's always a challenge to insert romance where there seems no place for it. But there's always a place.
      Stay tuned.
      Denise

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  3. In all fairness to the RFW strickly Romance Writers, I acknowledge how difficult it is to write to a prompt that is not pure romance. Some of our prompts lately have been experimental in writing outide the strict confines of the genre. The hosts try to cater to a wide variety of writing tastes and styles, and encourage our members and contributors to offer feedback and suggestions for prompts, general postings, and overall effectiveness of the site.

    Thank you RFWers, for your continued participation.

    .......dhole

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    1. And also its Romanticfridaywriters not RomanceFridayWriters. We always look for an element of romance not a full-blown Mills&Boon HEA. This last prompt's guidelines meant it was a challenge to insert a romantic element in so few words. Not to worry. Examine Greener Pastures for that romantic element which should always be there in our RFW submissions no matter how much drama is called for.
      Denise
      And as Donna said, we welcome your feedback. From some comments and emails I get the message you want to be able to write romantically, so do that. I see romantic possibilities aplenty in GP.

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  4. Oh wow, that's loads of entries. Fantastic!
    I shall have to check out some of those, they sound great.

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    1. We've missed you Maddy. Would be great to see you back. D.

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  5. Hi me hearties. Have been out of the loop with an internet crash in paradise. Has consumed most of our time trying to get the problem fixed. Hopefully will be back on board soon. Meanwhile it means more writing done!
    Loved all the entries. Writing is about imagination and we all have that in spades.
    I take the criticism re lack of outright romance but we need to see the possibilities and insert it into our stories and poems. Maybe the prompts are leaning more to drama ATM but that can lead to a romantic element.
    I'm working on my Greener Pastures and there'll be romance I promise!

    Thank you wonderful contributors! I look forward to the next round and the judging for FW. Just hope the net is sorted by then.

    Denise

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  6. Great round up, Denise and Donna. I enjoyed reading all the entries.

    But I'm mighty excited about Greener Pastures. I've got the perfect story for it. One I started writing 2 yrs ago and abandoned. I will have to revive it for this challenge.

    Have a great week, y'all!

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    1. Woo hoo. That sounds great Kiru. Sometimes a plan just comes together. D

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  7. Loved reading the submissions. Will try to be organised enough to submit next time :)

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  8. Quite a good run-down, Donna. Time does run fast. I realize that tomorrow is time for another challenge. As for my piece, it was something I wrote for the Challenge. It felt good writing something new after battling with edits.

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