by SB Sarah
Here is a text transcript of DBSA 98. Beta Heroes and Friends to Lovers - Sarah & Jane Answer Listener Mail. You can listen to the mp3 here, or you can read on!Ā
This podcast transcript was handmade by Garlic Knitter. Many thanks.
Ā Here are the books we discuss:
Ā
[music]
Sarah Wendell: Hello, and welcome to another DBSA podcast. Iām Sarah Wendell from Smart Bitches, Trashy Books, and with me is Jane from Dear Author. Today we are doing listener mail. Yay! We have two email messages, one about beta heroes, and another about friends-to-lovers plotlines. So prepare yourselves for book recommendations, but please note, if youāre driving or riding a bike or riding a bike in your garage to prepare for a triathlon ā how you doinā ā you donāt have to write all these down. The entry will always have the books that we talk about in it, so you can go to either my site, Smart Bitches, or you can go to Dear Author, and you can find listings of all of the books we talk about in this episode. So fear not!
This podcast is brought to you by InterMix, publisher of Pieces of Olivia, the brand-new New Adult novel from debut author Melissa West, available on July 15th for download.
The music that youāre listening to was provided by Sassy Outwater, and Iāll have information at the end of the podcast as to who this is.
And now, on with the podcast!
[music]
Sarah: Our first email for the listener mail fun is from Elle.
Hi, Sarah and Jane
Thank you for your podcast. I really enjoy it and have been trying out some of your recommendations. In podcast 75, you suggested that people write in and let you know some of their favorite books, and you would help with similar recommendations or a community where they could find more of the same.
Sarah: Haha, yeah, we can totally do that! Not a problem!
My reread, sweep-me-away, best-romance-of-all-time books are Lady of Sin and Lessons of DesireĀ by Madeline Hunter, A Lady Awakened by Cecilia Grant, and Itās in His Kiss and When He Was Wicked by Julia Quinn. Iām not sure what all these have in common or what they say about me, but no other books Iāve read really live up. I would like to start reading contemporary romances, as Iām getting sick of the Regency setting, but I donāt know where to start. Like you, Sarah, Iām not sure that emerging adult is my thing, and like you, Jane, I enjoy friends to lovers. I havenāt been able to find my niche on Goodreads. Please help.
Sarah: Well, you know, Jane and I are here to help you with friends-to-lovers romances. Are you ready? Because we have epic amounts of recommendation for you.
Jane: So the most recent friends-to-lovers story that I had read was Imaginary Lines by Allison Parr, and itās kind of a, a reunited ā well, thatās not true, itās not really a reunited lovers story, ācause they werenāt lovers before. She had a crush on him for a long time, and he wasnāt ready, so itās kind of a different friends-to-lovers story, ācause oftentimes the male or the female doesnāt realize the other one longs after them. In this particular case, the hero knew that the heroine was in love with him. His family ā their families wanted them to be together, and he just was, felt like he was too young, and he didnāt want to be tied down. He was a football player; he got drafted, and then he went off to New York. She comes to New York too because sheās a sports journalist, and they reconnect there, and he decides that heās ready. But one thing I didnāt like about it is that I felt like, I wish that she had had some options, that she had pursued dating some other people so she could have really decided that yes, this is the, the guy for me.
Jia, who is a really tough grader, really enjoyed this friends-to-lovers New Adult story called Whisper to Me, and I havenāt read it yet. Rachel, the heroine, is, doesnāt like to be tied down. Sheās kind of, like, not the man-whore, not the female version of the man-whore, but she just likes make-out sessions and one-night stands. And when she was in high school she had an awful motorcycle accident, and her boyfriend, who was driving the motorcycle at the time, couldnāt handle the guilt and abandoned her, and the only person who helped her was her best friendās older brother. And then she goes off to college, and when she comes back home for the summer, she reconnects with Kai. So theyāre childhood friends moving to lovers, and while heās kind of a typical bad boy, heās very caring toward Rachel, and the fact that he stood by her while she was recovering from her terrible motorcycle accident also made him, gave him a different dimension. Heās biracial, Native American, but, and his dad owns a casino. Thereās some discussion about whether the casino is good or bad for the, for the people of that culture, so I thought that that was kind of interesting. I have this book on my to-be-read list, but I think weāve talked about this before, about how when one of our reviewers review it, we feel like, oh, I have to read a different book because I canāt read a book thatās already been reviewed.
Sarah: I have that feeling all the time.
Jane: Another one that I havenāt read but that is recommended is Sun-Kissed by Laura Florand. Youāre a big fan of Laura Florand, arenāt you?
Sarah: - am, but specifically of the ones that are set in France and in Paris, the Amour et Chocolat series, I like a lot. The ones where sheās exploring the deepest depths of emotional pain, I canāt read those.
Jane: [Laughs] I donāt know about ā
Sarah: We lost a child. Nope, not for me. We were divorced. Nope, still not happening. Any, any deep emotional wrenching agony that is in parent in the cover copy, most of the sun and snow kissing and, and agony books. No. Nononono. Not happening.
Jane: So The Do-Over by M. K. Schiller is one that I had recommended earlier in the year. M. K. Schillerās books are very expensive, for some reason. Theyāre like seven, eight dollars, so itās hard for me to go, say, run out and buy this book, but it is a friends-to-lovers story that I enjoyed. The heroine is an attorney, and I felt like the, the author had a pretty good idea of what a trial attorney does and what this type of attorney does, so, and I donāt recommend lawyer books very often, but I felt like it was a good representation. And sheās not really attractive, or she doesnāt feel like sheās very attractive, and, but she loves this guy, Brad, her coworker, who is currently dating her sister. But she just doesnāt feel like theyāre a good fit, and she really loves Brad, so she goes to Bradās best friend and says, I want you to teach me how to be, how to attract Brad. And so she tempts him with an exclusive story that could win a, a Pulitzer. Four of her clients were forced into a sex ring by a prominent politician, sheās suing the politician for money damages, and theyāre willing to share their story, but she, they trust her to pick the right person to share it with. She thinks that heās a good person to do it because heās done some great stories in the past, so she dangles that out there. And so he agrees, and as they spend more time together, he begins to fall for her, and the way that it hap-, unspools is that sheās, you know, in, wants to pursue this other man, Brad, and Kyle is beginning to realize that he has feelings for her, and then he has to convince her that she doesnāt really love Brad, that she loves him. And I thought that was a really funny and different type of romantic conflict.
Another book is Crossing the Line by Kele Moon, another expensive book. I think this is, these are books published by Loose Id. I donāt know why the prices are so expensive.
Sarah: It makes me nuts. There are some, there are some Amber Quill books that are just ridiculously high priced.
Jane: So I, you know, wait for a sale or try to buy it on Kobo, and Loose Id has, like, their books are never available on all the retailers, and, and they donāt show up at the same time. I mean, itās hard to recommend this, because it, you donāt know if the readerās even going to be able to buy it. But itās been out for a while, so I think that they will. [Laughs] The story begins with Wyatt and Tabitha meeting in the third grade, and about 60% of the story is about, is from third grade to high school and how they fall in love and what separates them and how they come back together. The one problem I had was there was this long separation, 13 years, during which they are separated. It didnāt make sense to me why they were separated for so long ā
Sarah: Mm-hmm.
Jane: - and I felt both of them could have been more proactive, but if you like friends-to-lovers story, I definitely think that this kind of hits those pleasure buttons.
Sarah: - Sarah Mayberry book, Her Best Friend, I think it is? Did you, didnāt you read and like that one?
Jane: Yeah, I did.
Sarah: That was on my list because ā I actually have two, I have a male/male list and a male/female list and then a sort of iffy female/female recommendation that isnāt quite a friendship because one of the characters is openly fascinated with the other one ā But on my list is Her Best Friend by Sarah Mayberry, and thatās a, a Harlequin Superromance, right? That should be a Superromance, so it would be many, many words for not a lot of money. The thing about Mayberry is that she writes really great dialogue and emotional depth to her characters so that when they talk about how theyāre feeling or they show how theyāre feeling, itās not just a bunch of telling informing you this is the characterās emotional state. The way in which she writes it, you feel it too. Itās very powerful.
The other one I think that you read is Catching Jordan by Miranda Kenneally. Isnāt that also a friends to lovers?
Jane: Yeah. Thatās a very cute YA, and the one reason I really liked it is I felt like the author either knew someone or had experienced it herself, the recruiting process, and it felt very real to me.
Sarah: Itās nice when, when an author gets the background details right. It, it almost makes everything that happens between the characters seem more real.
Jane: Yes.
Sarah: Like, with our interview with L in the FBI, the minute that things arenāt accurate sheās like, well, canāt read the story at all because these basic things arenāt right, so when you have the depth and the background so accurate, it makes everything else more accurate as well.
Jane: Yeah. I mean, one, one small inaccuracy can really ruin your pleasure for the book. I was reading this book, I See London, and the characters go to Venice, and they drive in cars ā
Sarah: What?
Jane: - and ā yeah, right, so Iām ā and the whole story takes place overseas in different locations, Paris, London, and Venice, and after I read the Venice scene Iām like, I donāt know if sheās right about anything now.
[Laughter]
Sarah: What about ā and Iām going to break our Kristen Ashley moratorium, which I rarely do ā isnāt the Rock Chick series, or at least the first couple of books, arenāt they friends to lovers as well? I havenāt read those, ācause those didnāt appeal to me, but I wanted to ask you.
Jane: Actually, yes. The very first one, they were friends for a long time, the very first Rock Chick. The Rock Chick series reminds me of the, the Blair books by Linda Howard. Theyāre not my favorite Kristen Ashley books, but Iāve read them all. I donāt know what that says about me, because thereās, like, seven of them.
Sarah: [Laughs] I like the fact that if you go to Kristen Ashleyās website, thereās a whole section where the Rock Chicks answers questions in character, so all the characters answer questions from readers, and you can, you can tell how good she is at writing voices and characters, because it seems completely real that these are people answering your email. I, itās just awesome. But I havenāt read that one, because Kristen Ashley doesnāt always work for me. But I was pretty sure that was friends to lovers.
The other books on my list, I have one historical, one contemporary novella, and one straight contemporary, and is the male/female. Just One of the Guys by Kristan Higgins is probably my favorite Higgins. The, the, the other books that I have read from her have not all measured up to that one book. Thatās totally my favorite. Those characters, the hero and the heroine, have been friends for a long time but have a lot of boundaries in between them, specifically that he works for her father in the, in the firehouse, and theyāre attracted to each other, but thereās a lot of other little things that are happening between their families that keep them separate, and thereās a scene at the end that is just so incredible that it, and totally humiliating and funny, but lovely, and I love that book.
Elyse reviewed and really liked Summer Is for Lovers by Jennifer McQuiston, and that was kind of interesting, because the first McQuiston book she read, she didnāt like, because it was set, sort of like The Hangover, the hero and heroine woke up married and then spent the rest of the book apart, trying ā
Jane: I, I hated that book.
Sarah: [Laughs] ā spent the rest of the book apart, trying to figure out what the hell happened, and Elyse was like, this did not work for me, because they werenāt actually together, but Summer Is for Lovers she liked a lot, especially because it was set at the beach in a historical time period, so it was a slightly different setting, and it is a friends-to-lovers story.
Also, I think the first two or three Smythe-Smith books from Julia Quinn are all friends to lovers, or theyāre characters who have been in, in each othersā social orbit long enough that they know each other on one level, and then they become attracted to each other on another. The first one, I think itās Just Like Heaven, where thereās, like, four chapters in the middle where heās sick, and thatās all thatās happening, that is a definite friends to lovers, and itās adorable. The thing about this series from Julia Quinn is that (a) just about everybody in the book is a past character, so nothing truly egregious will happen. If youāre looking for things that are not going to rip your heart out, this is perfect, ācause nothing bad could happen to these people; itās like the safest Regency world in, in ever. Like, theyāre all past characters. Nothing badās going to happen. But they are also very confectionary in, in texture. I, I always call them, like, mineral water. If itās fresh and cold and youāve just read it, itās awesome. If you let it come up to room temperature, itās really not enjoyable, and thatās kind of how it is when you read this particular series. While youāre reading it, itās great! And then, like, two hours after you finish it, you go, wait, what happened? There were, there were things that, what, and, and nothing, nothing permanently sticks. Itās very friendly, but not too incisive in your emotions.
The other one I wanted to recommend is a novella. Itās a holiday novella called In the Clear by Tamara Morgan. I really liked this book for two reasons. One, the hero has been in love with the heroine since forever, and heās socially awkward and very quiet and shy but also has a huge secret that heās keeping from his best friend and his best friendās sister, who he is secretly in love with. The sister is sort of an attempt to undermine the manic pixie dream girl trope where she is goofy and goofy things happen to her, but it actually frustrates her that no one holds her accountable when she makes a mistake because oh, well, you know, thatās just so-and-so, and sheās so cute, and that makes her, that makes her really angry. Because she is trying to constantly improve and prove herself, she gets involved with the heroās secret, which I donāt want to reveal ā itās not, like, a horrible thing, but itās, itās, it makes her see him in a completely new way, and the change of seeing him as her siblingās best friend into someone who is really capable and strong is pretty awesome. But I happen to really like that.
The other thing about friends to lovers, though, is that thereās kind of two flavors. Thereās friends to lovers who have known each other forever and now all of a sudden Iāve noticed youāre hot, and then thereās siblingās friend to lover, so you, you, youāve grown up with this person whoās your siblingās friend, and you might have had a crush on them at one point, and now itās time for that possibility to be reciprocated. Those are sort of two flavors of the friends-to-lovers genre.
The male/male ones that I could think of very quickly were Caught Running by Madeleine Urban, and thatās about two guys who went to the same high school who come back to the high school as teachers, and the one teacher is the gym teacher, and heās the football co-, no, heās a baseball coach, excuse me, and then the other guy teaches science and is asked to be the assistant coach to the baseball team, and he knows nothing about sports. They kind of knew each other in school, and they kind of know each other now, but they have to figure out how to work together and also get past all of the prejudices they had against one another for being a jock and a nerd.
I am pretty sure, and you can correct me if Iām wrong here, although you might not know this one, Iām pretty sure Hot Head by Damon Suede is friends to lovers, and I heard so many people saying how amazing that book is. That would probably make this person very happy; it would make Elle very happy.
And the other one that is kind of friends to lovers but not quite is Strawberries for Dessert by Marie Sexton, which I really liked because he was two very different kinds of characters. I had some problems with the ending and the idea that there were, there were moments in the story where I felt as if one of the characters had had something done grievously wrong to them by their boss, and it wasnāt pursued in the way that I wanted it to have been. But the characters are interested in one another and become friends first because one of them has an incredibly busy work life, and the other one isnāt willing to waste time on people who arenāt going to actually be present when theyāre together, but ultimately what they learn about one another and how they become friends makes the part where they become a couple even better. And the, the way in which the one characterās father interacts with his sonās sort of new boyfriend is one of the best scenes in the book, and I donāt want to spoil it, ācause itās so sweet. Itās just adorable.
But thatās pretty much all of my list.
This next email is from Anna:
Hi, Sarah! Hi, Jane! Greetings from Canada!
I really enjoy the podcast and basically listen to it any time I have to set foot outside. Walking the kids to school? Put on the podcast! Off to run some errands? Put on the podcast! Random strangers thinking itās okay to talk to me? Podcast, put on the podcast now. Sorry, canāt you hear you through my headphones! Guess youāll have to talk to someone else. I figured after many hours of listening to the two of you being all clever about romance, it was high time I popped in to say hi. So, hi!
While Iām here, I figured Iād pick your brains for some reading recommendations. See, I love me some beta heroes. I love them so much, I married one! But they seem to be a relatively rare breed in romance, or maybe Iām just reading the wrong books. There are some truly lovely alphas out there, but most of the time I canāt help but think Iād be spending a lot more time ramming heads with these guys than ramming squishier bits together. And donāt even get me started on the alpha-holes.
Iāve read The Devilās Delilah and basically everything Victoria Dahl and Courtney Milan have ever written. I like historicals ā Tessa Dare is another favorite ā contemporaries, and some paranormal, though Iām more inclined to pick up something thatās straight up urban fantasy.
If you ladies had some beta recommendations for me, that would be fantastic, because I could really use a new fictional character crush.
p.s. One of you is probably wrong, and Iām not saying which one.
Sarah: Right, that last part just made me so happy. Okay, Anna, we are so prepared to hook you up. Are you ready? You donāt have to write any of this down, ācause itās going to be in the podcast entry, but prepare ye. We have many, many beta hero recommendations.
Jane: I think Noelle Adams is, who writes contemporary romances, she writes very, not average, but not overpowering males, and theyāre successful, just like I think betas can be successful. Theyāre definitely not the Neanderthal knuckle-dragging cavemen that kind of depict the alpha hero these days. So I would say Noelle Adams. She writes, one of my favorite books is this book she writes, Escorted, under the pen name of Claire Kent, and thatās a, a book featuring a male prostitute, and I really donāt really like those books, but I ended up liking that one a lot, and it led me to read quite a few of her books. She has kind of a ā Iām not quite sure how to describe it. I donāt want to say itās emotionless, but sheās a spare writer and I like that, and her drama isnāt overwrought, and her characters seem very authentic. She has a lot of marriage-in-trouble stories or marriage-of-convenience stories where characters are learning to, that they have greater feelings than they had originally realized, which I think is kind of a fun trope, too.
Ellen Hartman, she writes Superromances, I think her heroes arenāt beta, or arenāt alpha, but very normal. Obviously, Shannon Stacey I think is one of, a great, a great writer whoās writing relatable heroes. Sarah Mayberry. Thatās who I can think of right off the top of my head.
I think Mary Jo Putneyās book Shattered Rainbows in the Fallen Angel series is one of the most memorable and I, and I would say beta heroes that Iāve read in, in a long, long time. Itās a book published, I think, in the 1980s.
Sarah: I have a question for you, then. The Madness of Lord Ian Mackenzie. Would you consider Ian Mackenzie a beta hero?
Jane: Gosh. You know, I think a beta is such a confusing term ā
Sarah: Yep.
Jane: - you get kind of, kind of emasculation, which itās not, but it, itās like this, you know, oh, theyāre second in command, or theyāre ā and I donāt view that at all, I just kind of view ā
Sarah: I know, me either.
Jane: - them as individuals who arenāt running around doing the pelican dance from ā
Sarah: Yes.
Jane: - Nemo. Mine, mine, mine, mine, mine, mine.
Sarah: [Laughs] Mine! Mine! Mine!
Jane: Mine! Mine!
Together: Mine!mine!Mine!mine!Mine!mine!
[Laughter]
Jane: So ā
Sarah: The, the thing about betas is I love them, but they can be very difficult to describe, and Annaās example of The Devilās Delilah is a really good example of a beta, because the heroine is the centerpiece of the book, and the hero turns out to be this guy whoās constantly in the background of what sheās doing, and sheās kind of interesting, kind of interested in him, kind of thinks heās cute, but is more focused on this outwardly charming, assertively courting dude who ends up not being the hero, because itās this guy in the backdrop whoās been quietly arranging things for her that ends up winning her heart. The, the thing about beta heroes that I love is that they just do their own thing, and they donāt have to be assertively demanding of, of attention. They just do their thing, and they donāt particularly care what you think of it. And thereās also the idea of the gamma hero, which is a, a blend of the alpha and the beta, and I have never been able to fully distinguish between the beta and the, the gamma hero. I figured thereās just many more varieties of beta, and itās just harder to describe all of the different ones.
The ones that I wrote down as beta heroes are ā I have contemporary and historical and ā yeah, contemporary and historical. Just One of the Guys, which I mentioned a minute ago, is also a beta hero. Heās, heās not trying to be, you know, the superhero, heās not trying to be the captain, heās not, you know, aggressive, heās not any kind of alpha. Heās just doing his thing, and heās perfectly awesome the way that he is, and the way in which other characters interact with him, heās also very content with who he is.
I also think that Mr. Impossible by Loretta Chase has a beta hero, but so does Last Nightās Scandal. Perry, or Peregrine and Olivia, Perryās kind of a beta hero. He does his thing, and heās perfectly content with who he, who he is and doesnāt need to be recognized or in command or a leader all of the time. If you contrast him in the historical world with someone like Devil Cynster who takes no shit and is obviously in, in control and in command, theyāre two very different types of dudes. I also think most of the heroes in the Smythe-Smith series are also ā by Julia Quinn ā are also beta heroes, many of them, anyway.
And then ā this is another one I wanted to ask you about, Jane. In Flat Out Sexy by Erin McCarthy, the hero is a racecar driver, and drivers are pretty, you know, cocky and full of themselves, but he was a very mellow dude and not as alpha and loud and demanding as the other drivers that surrounded him, and certainly not as alpha as the heroineās late husband. And I sort of saw the hero of Flat Out Sexy as a beta hero, but I wanted to know what you thought.
Jane: Oh, sure. And I, I would say that a lot of McCarthyās hero, heroes are very, very beta and, and laidback and ā you know, one of the most beta heroes that I, is in Tell Me Lies by Jennifer Crusie, the mechanic hero?
Sarah: Yes! Totally.
Jane: Heās just like, you know, stuff, shit happens.
Sarah: Yep.
Jane: [Laughs] But when they want to have something, when they want something, they go out and pursue it.
Sarah: Yep, exactly. Theyāre, they do not need to have the alpha recognition, but if they want to do something, theyāre going to go do it. The, one of the things that I love about Hiccup in the How to Train Your Dragon series, the, the film versions, is that heās very much a beta hero, but his alphaness, the place in which he is the most competent and becomes the leader is his intellect and his strategy, and he doesnāt need the other characters to recognize him. They do it because they realize that heās going to have (a) a plan and (b) probably make something really fun or cool, and (c) itās going to be peaceful instead of war, which they figure out that they like better. But his leadership is entirely based on demonstrating his intellect and demonstrating his ability to do something other than what has always been done, which in any small cultural group is really hard to do. Itās really hard to not do what everyone expects you to do and what everyone else is doing. Itās hard to do something different, and thatās one thing I think beta heroes often do.
The two other books or three other books I wanted to mention: Vision in White by Nora Roberts. The hero is Carter, and heās awesome. Heās an academic, heās a little shy, heās a little blown away by how incredible the heroine is, and he thinks that she is just amazing, but he doesnāt try to be someone heās not, he just tries to be a better version of himself so that he can spend time with her without making everyone in the room feel a little awkward. And his conversations with his best friend, who is completely clueless about how to do these things, are completely excellent. Carter is probably one of my most favorite Nora Roberts heroes, and I know people really love, like, Roarke or some of the other heroes in her trilogies like the, the vampire guy in the, was it Morriganās? It was a paraNora, there was a vampire, he was really hot, whatever. That, those have, those guys donāt do it for me. Carter was, like, one of my favorite Nora Roberts heroes ever. And the guy in ā you know I donāt remember titles ā this one is the home renovation Nora Roberts contemporary ā I think itās Tribute ā but the hero is a graphic novelist. Heās wonderful! Heās completely content in his nerdiness, so when she writes a nerd hero, Iām totally there.
Jane: Wasnāt he kind of stalkerish? I couldnāt remember what ā I remember that book, but I kept think-, there was something about him ā
Sarah: He lived across the street and watched a lot of what was going on. Yeah.
Jane: There was something about him that just didnāt sit right with me. I actually like the hero in the, the, where the heroineās agoraphor-, -phobic, kind of, the, maybe slightly autistic, even?
Sarah: Oh, the, The Witness.
Jane: Yeah.
Sarah: Witness. Iām, Iām amazed at myself! Thatās like three whole titles Iāve remembered this morning. Iām, I need to just take the rest of the day off, ācause I win! [Laughs] She was agoraphobic and had, and was a hacker, basically, and he was the chief of police.
Jane: Right. But I thought she had some kind of socialization issues, too.
Sarah: Yeah, she definitely had social issues. Part of it, I think, was her character, and part of it was her upbringing, ācause her mother was a monster in terms of shaping her to a prescribed ideal. But yeah, she had social issues.
The other one that I liked from Nora Roberts is Born in Ice. The, the Born In trilogy is Born in Fire, Born in Ice, and Born in Shame. Born in Fire, if you want to read the character type that became Roarke, heās in there, but Born in Ice I love better because (a) the heroine runs an inn, and she loves making a welcoming and warm home for people, even if theyāre just travelers, and I have, I just, I love this part of her character. The hero is a mystery writer, and he needs isolation and quiet to write his book, and so he checks into her hotel and is basically like, you know, leave me alone, Iāve got to work. The way in which heās portrayed, his focus is getting his book done, and heās sort of interested in her, but he doesnāt have time for that right now. I liked him a lot, especially because he has that, like, like what you said, Jane, that sort of laidback, very chill, Iām-going-to-do-my-own-thing attitude, and I donāt need everyone to pay attention.
The other, the last beta hero that I thought of was a book I read recently called Fangirl by Rainbow Rowell, and thatās a YA novel, but itās ā Theyāre in college in their freshman year. I donāt think thereās any portrayed sex in the book ā I canāt remember ā so itās more YA than New Adult. The heroine writes fanfic and has come to college with her twin sister, and to her surprise, her twin sister doesnāt want to room with her, and so sheās put in a room with a stranger, sheās got a lot of social anxiety, and the place where she feels most comfortable is the fandom online where she is a relatively famous and well-respected fanfic writer, but thatās a big secret in her real life. No one knows except for her sister. Her roommateās buddy is someone who she really is sort of curious about, but she assumes that theyāre together, so she never considers him as a, a sort of option until you start to see that he is, he is like the character in The Devilās Delilah. Heās paying attention to what happens to her and is sort of in the periphery trying to make things, make sure things are okay. Heās a very quiet caretaker, and itās the caretaker part that I like a lot. Heās, heās very chill and very mellow and does his own thing, but when he stands up for himself when she doesnāt treat him the way that he would like her to treat him, he doesnāt, heās not a pushover, heās not going to put up with a lot of crap, but heās very chill about how he goes about his life, and thatās another thing I like about beta heroes.
Do you have any other, any other suggestions?
Jane: Iām trying to think of different authors, because I think, I think an author tends to write a certain type of character, you know, like ā
Sarah: Mm-hmm. Yep.
Jane: Youāre, youād be hard pressed to find an alpha in a Jennifer Crusie ā
Sarah: Yes.
Jane: - or a Sarah Mayberry, or even Nora Roberts. I mean, Roarke is a big ā I think ā a big departure from her normal heroes.
Sarah: Roarke is a definite departure into alphadom for her, but even then you can see parts of him in earlier books.
Jane: Iām trying to think of ā I think I shot my wad. I mean, Julie James. I donāt think her characters ā
Sarah: I shot my wad! [Laughs]
Jane: Yeah. I, Iām try-, I donāt know, what do you think? Like, Kyle, I think, is not super alpha. The Twitter Terrorist?
Sarah: No, heās absolutely not, he is definitely not an alpha male. He does his own thing, and it gets him in trouble. A lot of her, you know, youāre right, a lot of Julies Jamesā heroes are not openly alpha. There are some that are, and then there are some that are like ā
Jane: Yeah, and actually the ones that have the kind of overt alpha are my least favorite. Like, the first one, I thought he was a real asshole.
Sarah: Yep. Totally.
Jane: And I, I think when she balances better there, ācause I think that by their jobs, FBI agents or attorneys, you kind of think that theyāre alpha, and so because of their jobs you ascribe them, but when they interact with the heroine, theyāre not, maybe they try to be overbearing, but the heroines always shove back so much that it doesnāt work.
Sarah: Mm-hmm.
Jane: I donāt know.
Sarah: Well, part of it is that if theyāre FBI investigators, one of the most valuable skill sets they have is to listen and observe and not be obvious, and thatās not an alpha skill set. Thatās a very beta skill set, to blend into the background, to listen and observe and let someone else lead a particular conversation because itās in the investigatorās best interest to allow that to happen. Thatās a, thatās a pretty beta thing to do. The other thing about Julie Jamesās hero and heroine pairs is that often I think the heroines are alphas. They are openly ambitious, they like their jobs, they have professional and personal goals, they are determined, and they take the lead in situations. For example, the last one, It Happened One Wedding, that, she was very much an alpha. The one before that with the heroine whoās the general counsel for the restaurant company, and the FBI comes to her to place a bug in the restaurant to catch a particular person doing something that they shouldnāt be doing? She was also an alpha. She, she was in charge, and the heroes in those, in that situation, he had to, he had to respect that, ācause that was her turf. Even though he could get a subpoena and he could make her legally do it, he went in acknowledging, this is your turf, this is your territory, I will follow your lead, and sheās like, okay, good, ācause thatās how I roll, and I lead generally, so get out of my way. The heroines in her books have alpha characteristics more often than the heroes do, which is something that I just realized. Ooh, it makes me very happy. The heroes are, theyāre not necessarily laidback and chill. I mean, they are federal law enforcement ā [laughs] ā thereās a certain lack of chill that comes with that, but part of their, their confidence is acceptance in themselves, and they donāt have to prove themselves.
[music]
Sarah: And that is all for this weekās podcast. I hope you enjoyed our short dip into reader mail. We have a lot more listener mail coming up, because you guys have all sent most excellent recommendations for young readers, so Iām going to humbly put out the request one more time.
If you have any recommendations for young readers who are looking for stuff to read this summer, please email us at sbjpodcast@gmail.com or call our Google voice number a 1-201-371-DBSA. Please do not forget to give us your name and where youāre calling from so we can include your message in an upcoming podcast.
This podcast is brought to you by InterMix, publisher of Pieces of Olivia, the brand-new New Adult novel from debut author Melissa West. This book will be available July 15th for download. You can find it wherever eBooks are sold.
[music]
The music that youāre listening to was provided by Sassy Outwater, and yes! More Peatbog. This track is called āPassport Panic,ā and it is available on their album Dust, and I will have links to many places where you can buy this music if you havenāt already. I think a great many of you have ended up with more Peatbog on your playlists because of the podcast, which is awesome, ācause the same thing totally happened to me.
As usual, just a reminder, if you are thinking, damn it, I was driving and I didnāt write down that book title and Iām never going to remember it, do not worry. Every book we talk about is listed in the podcast entry, and if you cannot figure out which book it was and you just remember a few pieces, email us! We can help you out.
Wherever you are and whatever youāre doing, Jane and I wish you the very best of reading. Thank you for listening.
[haunting music]
Categories: General Bitching