Story Deep Dive Podcast

Episode 70: Outsiders, Found Family, and Timeless Tropes in Tempt Me at Twilight

1 h 2 min · 3 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Episode 70: Outsiders, Found Family, and Timeless Tropes in Tempt Me at Twilight

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Welcome to Story Deep Dive! In this episode, Dana and Rachel open their month-long study of Tempt Me at Twilight by Lisa Kleypas with an overview of what makes this Victorian romance worth a full four-episode breakdown. Whether you’re a romance writer, a historical fiction author, or a story strategist, you’ll gain valuable insights on crafting a thematic series spine, deploying modern tropes inside a historical setting, and understanding why familiar story patterns aren’t something to run from — they’re something to use. You can also watch the video version of this podcast on YouTube! Estimate Timestamps 0:05 — Welcome and Intro Rachel brings extra energy because she can see Dana is tired, and Dana is unimpressed with the zhuzh. The banter sets the tone for an episode that’s simultaneously the audience’s first and the hosts’ last of the recording day. Rachel explains the recording quirk: the overview goes out first but gets recorded last, which means maximum silliness at the top of the month. 1:34 — Birthday Chat Rachel turned 33 and spent her birthday week running writing sprints and working. She names it as evidence she’s doing rest wrong, and she makes a goal for 33: learn how to have fun. Dana, approaching 48 and two years from 50, describes her opposite approach — a full birthday retreat at home with quilting, junk food, a warehouse book sale, and her favorite bakery. “My goal is always to optimize for joy and to live a life that I love living. Like right now, today, not someday.” The contrast between the two hosts is warm and genuinely instructive for any writer trying to figure out what sustainable creative work actually looks like. 26:23 — Book Summary Dana delivers the summary for Tempt Me at Twilight: Poppy Hathaway wants a quiet, respectable life with a well-mannered suitor. Harry Rutledge, a powerful self-made hotel owner, decides he wants her for himself. A scandal forces an unexpected marriage, and Poppy has to decide whether to hold onto the life she planned or risk everything for a love she never saw coming. 28:00 — Writing Victorian Romance: What Writers Need to Know Dana and Rachel break down the research and craft considerations for historical romance, specifically Victorian. Dana identifies the key pillars: era, culture, syntax, treatment of intimacy, and the norms around courting. Rachel shares a live example from a current client — catching anachronistic language, like “in the spotlight,” in a manuscript set before spotlights existed. “You gotta like pull that stuff out.” Both hosts note that writers who commit to historical romance tend to stay in it, because the research becomes an investment they can carry across an entire series. 37:11 — The Interconnected Series and the Outsider Theme Dana walks through how the Hathaway series works: Poppy’s book is book three, and the couples from books one and two are active participants in her story — not cameos. Rachel brings in something she found in a Lisa Kleypas interview: the author deliberately explores what it means to be an outsider in this era. The Hathaways are an unusual family that doesn’t quite fit gentry society, which makes them outsiders by temperament. They attract other outsiders: Romany husbands in books one and two, and in book three, Harry Rutledge — American, self-made, nouveau riche in a world where working for money is considered gauche. “She doesn’t do the same thing a third time,” Rachel notes. Each book finds a new shape for the outsider, creating thematic unity across the whole series, not just logistical connection. 46:00 — Modern Tropes in a Historical Setting Dana walks through the trope stack: found family, opposites attract, forced marriage, forced proximity, bad boy/good girl, fish out of water, morally ambiguous protagonist, “touch her and die.” Rachel points out that these same tropes are still showing up in books published in 2026 — nearly 20 years later — which says something about their staying power. Dana counters the “tropes are cliche” impulse with a full reframe: tropes are the heartbeat. She references bringing home Boogie as a puppy and the stuffed animals that had a heartbeat inside so he wouldn’t cry at night. “We are using that same thing when it comes to story. We recognize a thing and it’s like, well, dang, well, I wonder what they do.” The trope is the comfort. The story gets to be specific inside it. 59:00 — Wrap and Preview Dana announces this is one of her favorite books. Next week: plot. Book Selection Title: Tempt Me at Twilight Author: Lisa Kleypas Poppy Hathaway loves her unconventional family, though she longs for normalcy. Then fate leads to a meeting with Harry Rutledge, an enigmatic hotel owner and inventor with wealth, power, and a dangerous hidden life. When their flirtation compromises her own reputation, Poppy shocks everyone by accepting his proposal—only to find that her new husband offers his passion, but not his trust. Harry was willing to do anything to win Poppy—except to open his heart. All his life, he has held the world at arm’s length . . . but the sharp, beguiling Poppy demands to be his wife in every way that matters. Still, as desire grows between them, an enemy lurks in the shadows. Now if Harry wants to keep Poppy by his side, he must forge a true union of body and soul, once and for all. Where to Find the Book Tempt Me At Twilight by Lisa Kleypas is available in several formats. It's also widely available in libraries and online retailers. Details on her website [https://www.lisakleypas.com/books.html]. Next Episode: In the next episode, Dana and Rachel will dive into the plot of Tempt Me at Twilight — including the "squishy" external goal problem, how the tropes do the heavy lifting in a story without a concrete external conflict, and what writers can learn from it. Join the Conversation: Like what you heard? Subscribe, leave a review, and share your thoughts. Follow Story Deep Dive at storydeepdive.com [http://www.storydeepdive.com] and connect with Dana and Rachel to keep the discussion going! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit storydeepdive.substack.com [https://storydeepdive.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

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episode Episode 74: Genre Contracts, Blank Pages, and the Case for Structure artwork

Episode 74: Genre Contracts, Blank Pages, and the Case for Structure

Welcome to Story Deep Dive! In this bonus episode, Dana and Rachel dig into structure — not as a set of rules imposed from the outside, but as the tool that makes telling a story actually possible. Whether you’ve been resisting a beat sheet or spinning out on a blank page, this episode reframes structure as a cheat code that works for you and a compass that points toward the story you’re trying to tell. Whether you write romance, crime, fantasy, or anywhere in between, you’ll come away with a clearer sense of how structure functions, why genre expectations are actually on your side, and why the placeholder is the most underrated tool in any writer’s toolkit. You can also watch the video version of this podcast on YouTube! Estimate Timestamps 0:05 — Check-Ins: Final Pushes, Full Manuscript Requests, and a Summer Retreat Rachel’s clients are deep in their final stretch before publication or pitching. One book is days away from going to the proofreader for a July release. Another client just landed her first full manuscript request from an agent — a significant milestone a few weeks into querying. A third client is wrapping his query letter and plans to start pitching this summer. Dana’s gearing up for the first-ever DTW Summer Retreat, a mid-year checkpoint where Inner Circle students take stock of what they planned in December versus what actually happened. “I planned it like X, Y, Z, and this is what it’s been like in reality.” 11:20 — The Topic: Why Structure Matters (And Why You’re Not Exempt) Dana sets the tone upfront: she loves structure, and this episode is going to push you whether it’s your jam or not. Rachel frames the two entry points: Dana sees structure as a cheat code for intentional storytelling. Rachel sees it as a service to the audience — a mechanism for delivering the experience the reader came for. Both positions arrive at the same place. 14:10 — Structure as a Cheat Code When you have a structure — whether it’s a beat sheet, a four-act map, the heroic journey, or Save the Cat — you have a blueprint. Dana makes the comparison directly: no one wings building a house. The blueprint doesn’t decide what the house looks like; it ensures it doesn’t fall down. Structure gives you mile markers for when tension should escalate, when emotional payoff should land, and when turning points should hit. Your creative energy goes into what lives between the markers, not into deciding whether the markers exist. 17:18 — Genre Expectations as Creative Constraints That Help Rachel’s central argument: genre expectations are not restrictions — they’re a contract with the reader. She uses Sharp Objects as the example. Gillian Flynn uses the crime genre’s structural requirements (investigation, suspects, investigative beats) as the container for exploring violence, belonging, and family darkness. The structure focused the exploration. It didn’t confine it. “She uses the expectations of the crime genre to do that. But then the contents of those beats — what’s actually happening, what the crimes even are — these are all part of the exploration.” Genre expectations give writers a set of buckets for their ideas. The reader’s expectations become a scaffold to build on, not a ceiling to bump against. 22:07 — Structure as a Cure for the Blank Page Dana names it directly: structure is “a cure for feeling lost on the page.” When you know what the next beat needs to accomplish, the blank page stops being a void and becomes a question with parameters. Rachel extends this to the editing phase: holding a draft up against a structure lets you see not just that something is dragging, but why — what beat got skipped, what escalation got missed. The diagnostic clarity that structure provides works at every stage of the process. 24:06 — The Placeholder Is Your Friend Don’t spin out on a hazy scene. Put in a placeholder that names what needs to go there and keep moving. Rachel’s instruction: finish the draft first. Having the whole story gives you the context to fill those gaps in — “sometimes you need, number one, the distance from the thing. And two, the whole story.” Dana adds her practical approach: brackets in the manuscript for missing research, unnamed characters, or underdeveloped scenes. “It is so satisfying to do a control find and go find those brackets and begin to fill them in.” The broader point: knowing your structure helps you know what you don’t know. You can’t fix a gap you can’t see. 32:37 — Structure as Audience Service and the Genre Contract Dana and Rachel both push back on the idea that breaking structure is how you become original. Dana: “You don’t want somebody doing the neck snap because you did something off the wall. You would rather be that you give them what they’re looking for, but you do it in a way that only you can do it.” Structure is the starting line. Your voice, your tropes, your specific combination of elements — that’s what you bring inside it. Rachel frames it as service: structure helps your audience track the story, follow the emotional arc, and arrive at a satisfying landing. When the genre contract is broken, readers notice the violation instead of feeling the emotion. 38:04 — Innovating Inside Structure (Not by Breaking It) For commercial fiction writers, structural expectations are good news. The opportunities to innovate are wide. The mistake is looking for originality in the wrong direction — reaching for structural weirdness instead of leaning into what makes your specific execution distinctive. Dana: “Nail it and then begin to make strategic choices intentionally. You’ve already established the foundation that’s already there and good to go.” Structure also frees up creative energy: once the framework is holding the story, you can pour your best work into the elements you love most. 44:33 — Structure Becomes Intuitive — But Never Absent Experienced writers who seem to write without structure aren’t winging it. The structure is internalized. Dana: “People mistake that for being that you don’t have structure. You do — it is innate. When you think of an idea, it’s already placed securely where it should be.” Rachel adds the honest clarification: fluency doesn’t mean the first draft is clean. It means you can feel when something is wrong and name why. You develop the ability to distinguish between the voice of fear and the voice of writer’s intuition — and that distinction, once you can hear it, changes everything. Next Episode: Dana and Rachel kick off their discussion of Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros. Join the Conversation: Like what you heard? Subscribe, leave a review, and share your thoughts. Follow Story Deep Dive at storydeepdive.com [http://www.storydeepdive.com] and connect with Dana and Rachel to keep the discussion going! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit storydeepdive.substack.com [https://storydeepdive.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

Ayer52 min
episode Episode 73: Tropes, Morally Gray Heroes, and Slow Burn in Tempt Me at Twilight artwork

Episode 73: Tropes, Morally Gray Heroes, and Slow Burn in Tempt Me at Twilight

Welcome to Story Deep Dive! In this episode, Dana and Rachel close out their month-long study of Tempt Me at Twilight by Lisa Kleypas with the editor’s takeaways — the distilled craft lessons a writer should carry out of this book into their own work. They also preview June’s pick, Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros, and open a substantive conversation about romantasy as a developing genre and what happens when a breakout book defines a genre’s expectations for a new generation of readers. Whether you’re a romance writer, a fantasy author, or someone thinking through genre strategy and character craft, you’ll come away with practical tools for trope execution, writing morally complex heroes, sustaining tension in delayed-relationship stories, and making your story choices actually matter. You can also watch the video version of this podcast on YouTube! Estimate Timestamps 0:05 — Welcome and June Pick Preview: Fourth Wing Rachel opens with a tease. The June pick is Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros. Dana gives her honest read: she kept pushing play, she finished it, and she understands why it’s popular — but she’s not personally a dragon-book person and the protagonist’s age gave her a moment. The preview opens into a wider conversation about romantasy as a genre. Rachel unpacks why the book generates such extreme reactions: it combines established genres with established readerships and breaks conventions for both, which feels natural to readers who came in through Fourth Wing and discordant to readers who came in through traditional romance or fantasy. Dana adds a publishing industry note on the current wave of indie-to-trad crossovers and what limited rights deals look like in practice. 20:17 — Book Summary and Setup for Takeaways Dana delivers the summary. Then she and Rachel orient toward the takeaways: not an exhaustive review, but the specific things this book does well enough to serve as a craft model. 27:11 — Takeaway 1: Familiar Tropes Executed with a Twist Dana’s first takeaway is the trope work. The book’s roster is deep: found family, opposites attract, forced marriage (subverted), forced proximity, bad boy/good girl, fish out of water, morally ambiguous protagonist, touch her and die, the scandal. All familiar. All working. What elevates them is specificity of execution — subverting the trope’s typical shape (Poppy choosing the marriage instead of being pushed into it), and deploying tropes as structural pivots at act breaks rather than passive color. Rachel notes the net effect: “The tropes are doing the heavy lifting of the plot movement.” If you’re going to ask your tropes to carry the story in the absence of strong external conflict, you have to be that intentional about which ones you pick and where you place them. 27:42 — Takeaway 2: Morally Gray Without Going Dark Dana’s second takeaway is Harry specifically, and the broader principle he demonstrates: you can write a morally ambiguous male lead inside a warm, reader-safe story. Harry manipulates. He withholds truth. He is not sorry about how he acquired Poppy. And none of that turns the book into a dark romance. Rachel asks what keeps a morally gray character on the right side of the line. Dana’s answer: the code. “Normally they have a code they live by or a rule they live by or an ethos... So they’re not like a complete monster.” Harry’s code is consistent: take care of what’s mine, don’t lie outright, don’t ask permission. Add to that the moments where his genuine response to Poppy is visible — his curiosity about her curiosity, wanting her smiles and not just her compliance — and the full picture of him holds. Rachel adds the other essential piece: the reader needs to follow the logic of how he got here, even if they wouldn’t make the same choices. 39:28 — Takeaway 3: Delayed Relationship Development That Stays Engaging Dana’s third takeaway: this book proves you can delay the relationship arriving without losing reader engagement. The intimacy comes late. What holds the reader isn’t sexual tension exactly — it’s the genuine question of whether two fundamentally different people can figure out what it costs to actually be in a marriage. The mechanism is the near-miss: “She was able to maintain that tension of when we see them coming close together — it shows us how right they are — but then something comes in between that shows us how far they still have to go.” Real incompatibility worked through in real time. Not manufactured drama. That’s the difference between a story that feels like escalating tension and one that feels like two people going in circles. 44:29 — Takeaway 4: Ensemble Cast Integration Without Derailing the Romance Dana’s fourth takeaway is the interconnected series work — how Lisa Kleypas weaves the Hathaway family, returning series characters, and future hooks into Poppy and Harry’s story without ever making it feel like a side trip. The family is an active force, not a visiting committee. Future hooks (Leo and Catherine, Beatrice) are present but not disruptive. Series readers get a reward; new readers don’t feel lost. The result is a story world that feels alive. “I love that and the fact that they are sort of continuing and we get to catch up... it makes us even more curious about what happens next.” 51:25 — Takeaway 5: Utilize Your Story Decisions — Don’t Miss Your Own Setups Rachel’s major takeaway is the most transferable across genres: once you make a story choice, follow it into the story. Don’t set up an unusual family, a distinctive backstory, or a specific kind of world and then let it sit as texture. Ask what it changes. Ask what it enables. Ask what it prevents. “It can be really easy to miss those opportunities, right? Where you create a certain kind of family with a certain kind of dynamic and then you don’t think to push them into the fray.” Dana grounds this with Harry’s tinkerer detail: making him mechanically curious wasn’t arbitrary — it’s what makes Poppy visible to him in the curiosities room in a way no one else ever made her visible. The setup paid off. That’s the kind of intentional setup worth building. 1:03:20 — Closing and Preview Dana deploys her standing declaration exactly on cue. Rachel, who had it locked and loaded, was ready. Next week: Fourth Wing overview. Grab your copy. Book Selection Title: Tempt Me at Twilight Author: Lisa Kleypas Poppy Hathaway loves her unconventional family, though she longs for normalcy. Then fate leads to a meeting with Harry Rutledge, an enigmatic hotel owner and inventor with wealth, power, and a dangerous hidden life. When their flirtation compromises her own reputation, Poppy shocks everyone by accepting his proposal—only to find that her new husband offers his passion, but not his trust. Harry was willing to do anything to win Poppy—except to open his heart. All his life, he has held the world at arm’s length . . . but the sharp, beguiling Poppy demands to be his wife in every way that matters. Still, as desire grows between them, an enemy lurks in the shadows. Now if Harry wants to keep Poppy by his side, he must forge a true union of body and soul, once and for all. Where to Find the Book Tempt Me At Twilight by Lisa Kleypas is available in several formats. It's also widely available in libraries and online retailers. Details on her website [https://www.lisakleypas.com/books.html]. Next Episode: In the next episode, Dana and Rachel kick off their June discussion with an overview of Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros — including a conversation about romantasy as a genre, reader expectations, and what editors and coaches are watching in this space. Join the Conversation: Like what you heard? Subscribe, leave a review, and share your thoughts. Follow Story Deep Dive at storydeepdive.com [http://www.storydeepdive.com] and connect with Dana and Rachel to keep the discussion going! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit storydeepdive.substack.com [https://storydeepdive.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

24 de may de 20261 h 4 min
episode Episode 72: POV, Found Family, and the Morally Gray Hero in Tempt Me at Twilight artwork

Episode 72: POV, Found Family, and the Morally Gray Hero in Tempt Me at Twilight

Welcome to Story Deep Dive! In this episode, Dana and Rachel break down the character work in Tempt Me at Twilight by Lisa Kleypas — including the POV approach that wouldn’t fly in today’s market, the Hathaway family as an active story force, Poppy’s growth from sheltered girl to decisive woman, and Harry’s transformation that’s meaningful without being a full 180. Whether you’re a romance writer, a fantasy author, or a storyteller thinking through how to build characters that feel layered and dimensional, you’ll come away with tools for keeping your female protagonist from going flat, making your family dynamics do actual plot work, and writing a morally gray hero who’s still someone readers root for. You can also watch the video version of this podcast on YouTube! Estimate Timestamps 0:05 — Welcome and Opening Rachel barely lets Dana get settled before pivoting to the check-in. Dana’s non-reaction is perfectly timed. Business as usual. 1:06 — Community News: Showing Your Ass and the Summer Retreat Dana shares the concept for Danja Tales’ upcoming summer retreat: have you written a book where you put everything in? Every good idea, every risk, every bit you’ve been saving for “a better project later?” The retreat is built around helping writers figure out where they’re holding back, and why. “The version of you that’s needed to write your dream project resides somewhere in there. So if you try to write your dream project as the version of you that you are right now, you’ll blow it.” Rachel shares that Story Cipher Academy is opening for its next cohort — and reflects on the particular joy of watching writers who’ve completed one draft show up to mentor a new class. She also unpacks the Academy’s core design philosophy: separating writer brain and editor brain across the process so writers stop getting stuck by switching modes mid-draft. 28:27 — Book Summary and POV Caveat Dana gives the summary, then both hosts address the first thing writers should know about the character work in this book: the POV. Tempt Me at Twilight moves among multiple third-person POV characters — Poppy, Harry, staff, Hathaway family members — without a consistent anchor. Dana is straightforward: “I don’t believe that a story written in this manner would fly today.” It was standard in 2009. Reader preferences and agent expectations have shifted. Rachel notes the parallel to crime fiction from the same era — John Grisham, David Baldacci — where that semi-omniscient movement through heads was the norm. The lesson: every POV should earn its place, and staying inside your main characters creates more tension, not less. 34:33 — The Hathaway Family as a Character Unit Dana and Rachel both treat the family not as a collection of individual characters but as a unified entity. The Hathaways’ specific culture — protective, blunt, unbothered by what society thinks of them — changes the shape of Harry’s plan the moment he executes it. He expects a scandal to force Poppy’s hand. Her family tells her she doesn’t have to do a thing. Dana names the principle: “Things that would have been limiting if she had been in any other situation is not a limit in this situation.” Rachel extends it into a craft teaching: you make a story choice, and that choice should have real consequences. The family isn’t set dressing. It’s a force. Harry acquires a whole family when he marries Poppy — “her was the bag — them.” Cam quiet in his corner. Leo circling. The sisters with their love and their sisterly wisdom. None of them are going anywhere. And for writers planning series: know what you’re saying about family across the whole thing. Let that mean something. 45:16 — Poppy: Innocence Without Naivety Poppy wants ordinary. She wants boring, quiet, and a life far from Hathaway shenanigans. That desire is funny and doing craft work at the same time — because everything the story throws at her is the opposite. The risk of this character type is that she reads as flat, naive, or passive. Rachel explains how Lisa Kleypas prevents that: we’re in Poppy’s head. We watch her think. Her thinking is rational and calibrated even when she’s working from incomplete information. “She thinks very rationally about the situations she’s in... we watch her make a very rational weight of what’s going on.” That interiority is the thing that makes her agency credible. When she finally puts her foot down with Harry, the reader is already prepped. We know who she is. The lesson: the female main character is the one who most often becomes a problem for readers when her decisions look like the plot required them rather than the character choosing them. Being inside her head is the fix. 53:00 — Harry: Transformation Without the Full 180 Harry doesn’t become a different person. He’s still calculating, still someone who withholds information when it suits him, still someone who thinks “I take care of my people, they get great paychecks” is the same as caring about them. Dana is precise about his arc: he starts wanting Poppy as a possession and ends wanting all of her — the smiles, the laughter, the genuine warmth. Getting all of her requires becoming someone who can receive all of her. That’s it. That’s the transformation. Dana highlights the moments that make it visible: Harry picking up the ferret, Harry picking up the porcupine, Harry saying “he can have your heart as long as I have the rest of you” — “this is pre-transformation Harry right here” — and the slow recognition that what he thought was enough actually isn’t. 1:00:30 — True Opposites vs. Masked Sameness Rachel raises a distinction Dana mentioned in passing: most “opposites attract” setups hide a sameness underneath. Poppy and Harry aren’t like that. Their difference goes all the way down — she comes from warmth, closeness, and safety; he comes from isolation and a world where caring is a liability. That depth is what makes each time they come together and then ricochet apart feel like real friction, not manufactured conflict. “Normally the way that you would see it play out is that their opposite nature has a sameness root. That’s not here.” Book Selection Title: Tempt Me at Twilight Author: Lisa Kleypas Poppy Hathaway loves her unconventional family, though she longs for normalcy. Then fate leads to a meeting with Harry Rutledge, an enigmatic hotel owner and inventor with wealth, power, and a dangerous hidden life. When their flirtation compromises her own reputation, Poppy shocks everyone by accepting his proposal—only to find that her new husband offers his passion, but not his trust. Harry was willing to do anything to win Poppy—except to open his heart. All his life, he has held the world at arm’s length . . . but the sharp, beguiling Poppy demands to be his wife in every way that matters. Still, as desire grows between them, an enemy lurks in the shadows. Now if Harry wants to keep Poppy by his side, he must forge a true union of body and soul, once and for all. Where to Find the Book Tempt Me At Twilight by Lisa Kleypas is available in several formats. It's also widely available in libraries and online retailers. Details on her website [https://www.lisakleypas.com/books.html]. Next Episode: In the next episode, Dana and Rachel wrap up their discussion of Tempt Me at Twilight with their editor's takeaways — including what this book does best, what writers should model, and a preview of next month's pick. Join the Conversation: Like what you heard? Subscribe, leave a review, and share your thoughts. Follow Story Deep Dive at storydeepdive.com [http://www.storydeepdive.com] and connect with Dana and Rachel to keep the discussion going! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit storydeepdive.substack.com [https://storydeepdive.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

17 de may de 20261 h 9 min
episode Episode 71: External Conflict, Tropes, and Poppy's Choice in Tempt Me at Twilight artwork

Episode 71: External Conflict, Tropes, and Poppy's Choice in Tempt Me at Twilight

Welcome to Story Deep Dive! In this episode, Dana and Rachel dig into the plot mechanics of Tempt Me at Twilight by Lisa Kleypas — specifically what happens when a romance doesn’t have a concrete external goal, and how tropes can function as a story’s structural engine when the external conflict is light. Whether you’re a romance writer, a fantasy author, or anyone working through the question of what actually drives a plot forward, you’ll gain valuable insights on the braid framework, trope transitions at act breaks, and how subverting a familiar trope can immediately establish your protagonist’s agency. You can also watch the video version of this podcast on YouTube! Estimate Timestamps 0:05 — Welcome and Opening Rachel shares the experience of falling into early 2000s Lisa Kleypas interview footage while looking up pronunciation — including a Borders book club feature that hit hard with the nostalgia. Dana looked up the name too, even though she planned not to have to say it out loud. 2:33 — Community News: Summer Planning and Sustainability Dana announces that Danja Tales is trading the summer book club for a movie series: Love and Basketball, The Proposal, and Maid in Manhattan. The selections are craft-focused. Love and Basketball is structured around four quarters that map to four-act story structure. The Proposal is “a great counter example” — a forced-proximity setup with genuine external stakes that make the fake engagement concrete and legible. Maid in Manhattan tracks a clear character transformation arc. Rachel uses the conversation to reflect on flexibility as a leadership skill, and to share that Story Cipher Academy is building in a summer break — modeling for her students the sustainability she’s been coaching them toward. 32:14 — Book Summary and Overview of Topics Dana delivers the summary. Then both hosts lay out their focus areas for the episode: the “squishy” external goal, how tropes carry the story in its absence, trope transitions at act breaks, and Poppy’s subversion of the forced marriage trope. 38:54 — The “Squishy” External Goal Problem Dana names the core structural issue in Tempt Me at Twilight: there is no concrete external goal. “Having an external goal, which is a concrete objective goal that we all can see — did they accomplish this? Yes or no — makes it easier for you to follow the story.” Without it, the story runs on relational tension alone, which is harder to track progress on and harder to build stakes around. Dana calls this “squishy” — and uses Rachel’s earlier mention of The Proposal as the live counter-example. In The Proposal, there are real stakes, something to win, something to lose. “It makes it concrete.” Dana’s recommendation for writers: make sure the braid is present — external, internal, and romantic threads all working at once, because “the presence of that braid will help you keep from having moments where it bottoms out.” 46:38 — Tropes as the Plot Engine Because the external plot is light, the tropes carry structural weight. Dana argues they do it — and Rachel adds the mechanism that makes it work: Lisa Kleypas uses act breaks to transition tropes. “I was reading it. I was like, oh, it’s happening. The thing is happening.” She’d check the percentage on her phone and it would be right at 50%. The trope turns are the plot turns. Rachel also highlights what she considers one of the sharpest moves in the book: the subversion of “forced marriage.” In most Victorian romances, it’s the family pushing the protagonist. Here, Poppy’s family says she doesn’t have to do anything — and it’s Poppy who chooses to go through with the marriage on her own terms, with her own reasoning. “Based on the circumstances, Poppy makes an intentional choice.” That immediately positions her as an agent, not a passenger in her own story. 48:05 — Harry’s Transformation and What the Story Is Really Tracking Dana breaks down Harry’s arc: he wants Poppy, but he also wants to stay unchanged. The story tracks what it actually costs to have all of her — not just the legal version. “He had to do something that he’s never done before, which is show that not just that he could be steady and that he could be dependable, but that he could be trustworthy.” Dana also articulates something she plans to write as an essay: great storytelling covers a multitude of structural sins because the emotional truth underneath is so legible. “He sees the diamond and when he saw it, we saw him see it.” That moment is why readers come back to this book for 15 years. 1:00:57 — Final Notes: Know Your Niche Dana closes with the honest take: she would not advise a current client to write a story without strong external conflict. Not because it’s impossible, but because the market offers readers more options now, and new writers need every advantage they can give themselves. The book stands as a master class in what a skilled author can pull off — not as a structural blueprint to replicate. Book Selection Title: Tempt Me at Twilight Author: Lisa Kleypas Poppy Hathaway loves her unconventional family, though she longs for normalcy. Then fate leads to a meeting with Harry Rutledge, an enigmatic hotel owner and inventor with wealth, power, and a dangerous hidden life. When their flirtation compromises her own reputation, Poppy shocks everyone by accepting his proposal—only to find that her new husband offers his passion, but not his trust. Harry was willing to do anything to win Poppy—except to open his heart. All his life, he has held the world at arm’s length . . . but the sharp, beguiling Poppy demands to be his wife in every way that matters. Still, as desire grows between them, an enemy lurks in the shadows. Now if Harry wants to keep Poppy by his side, he must forge a true union of body and soul, once and for all. Where to Find the Book Tempt Me At Twilight by Lisa Kleypas is available in several formats. It's also widely available in libraries and online retailers. Details on her website [https://www.lisakleypas.com/books.html]. Next Episode: In the next episode, Dana and Rachel will break down the characters of Tempt Me at Twilight — including the Hathaway family as a unit, Poppy's transformation from girl to woman, and Harry's arc as one of Dana's all-time favorite morally complex male characters. Join the Conversation: Like what you heard? Subscribe, leave a review, and share your thoughts. Follow Story Deep Dive at storydeepdive.com [http://www.storydeepdive.com] and connect with Dana and Rachel to keep the discussion going! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit storydeepdive.substack.com [https://storydeepdive.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

10 de may de 20261 h 5 min
episode Episode 70: Outsiders, Found Family, and Timeless Tropes in Tempt Me at Twilight artwork

Episode 70: Outsiders, Found Family, and Timeless Tropes in Tempt Me at Twilight

Welcome to Story Deep Dive! In this episode, Dana and Rachel open their month-long study of Tempt Me at Twilight by Lisa Kleypas with an overview of what makes this Victorian romance worth a full four-episode breakdown. Whether you’re a romance writer, a historical fiction author, or a story strategist, you’ll gain valuable insights on crafting a thematic series spine, deploying modern tropes inside a historical setting, and understanding why familiar story patterns aren’t something to run from — they’re something to use. You can also watch the video version of this podcast on YouTube! Estimate Timestamps 0:05 — Welcome and Intro Rachel brings extra energy because she can see Dana is tired, and Dana is unimpressed with the zhuzh. The banter sets the tone for an episode that’s simultaneously the audience’s first and the hosts’ last of the recording day. Rachel explains the recording quirk: the overview goes out first but gets recorded last, which means maximum silliness at the top of the month. 1:34 — Birthday Chat Rachel turned 33 and spent her birthday week running writing sprints and working. She names it as evidence she’s doing rest wrong, and she makes a goal for 33: learn how to have fun. Dana, approaching 48 and two years from 50, describes her opposite approach — a full birthday retreat at home with quilting, junk food, a warehouse book sale, and her favorite bakery. “My goal is always to optimize for joy and to live a life that I love living. Like right now, today, not someday.” The contrast between the two hosts is warm and genuinely instructive for any writer trying to figure out what sustainable creative work actually looks like. 26:23 — Book Summary Dana delivers the summary for Tempt Me at Twilight: Poppy Hathaway wants a quiet, respectable life with a well-mannered suitor. Harry Rutledge, a powerful self-made hotel owner, decides he wants her for himself. A scandal forces an unexpected marriage, and Poppy has to decide whether to hold onto the life she planned or risk everything for a love she never saw coming. 28:00 — Writing Victorian Romance: What Writers Need to Know Dana and Rachel break down the research and craft considerations for historical romance, specifically Victorian. Dana identifies the key pillars: era, culture, syntax, treatment of intimacy, and the norms around courting. Rachel shares a live example from a current client — catching anachronistic language, like “in the spotlight,” in a manuscript set before spotlights existed. “You gotta like pull that stuff out.” Both hosts note that writers who commit to historical romance tend to stay in it, because the research becomes an investment they can carry across an entire series. 37:11 — The Interconnected Series and the Outsider Theme Dana walks through how the Hathaway series works: Poppy’s book is book three, and the couples from books one and two are active participants in her story — not cameos. Rachel brings in something she found in a Lisa Kleypas interview: the author deliberately explores what it means to be an outsider in this era. The Hathaways are an unusual family that doesn’t quite fit gentry society, which makes them outsiders by temperament. They attract other outsiders: Romany husbands in books one and two, and in book three, Harry Rutledge — American, self-made, nouveau riche in a world where working for money is considered gauche. “She doesn’t do the same thing a third time,” Rachel notes. Each book finds a new shape for the outsider, creating thematic unity across the whole series, not just logistical connection. 46:00 — Modern Tropes in a Historical Setting Dana walks through the trope stack: found family, opposites attract, forced marriage, forced proximity, bad boy/good girl, fish out of water, morally ambiguous protagonist, “touch her and die.” Rachel points out that these same tropes are still showing up in books published in 2026 — nearly 20 years later — which says something about their staying power. Dana counters the “tropes are cliche” impulse with a full reframe: tropes are the heartbeat. She references bringing home Boogie as a puppy and the stuffed animals that had a heartbeat inside so he wouldn’t cry at night. “We are using that same thing when it comes to story. We recognize a thing and it’s like, well, dang, well, I wonder what they do.” The trope is the comfort. The story gets to be specific inside it. 59:00 — Wrap and Preview Dana announces this is one of her favorite books. Next week: plot. Book Selection Title: Tempt Me at Twilight Author: Lisa Kleypas Poppy Hathaway loves her unconventional family, though she longs for normalcy. Then fate leads to a meeting with Harry Rutledge, an enigmatic hotel owner and inventor with wealth, power, and a dangerous hidden life. When their flirtation compromises her own reputation, Poppy shocks everyone by accepting his proposal—only to find that her new husband offers his passion, but not his trust. Harry was willing to do anything to win Poppy—except to open his heart. All his life, he has held the world at arm’s length . . . but the sharp, beguiling Poppy demands to be his wife in every way that matters. Still, as desire grows between them, an enemy lurks in the shadows. Now if Harry wants to keep Poppy by his side, he must forge a true union of body and soul, once and for all. Where to Find the Book Tempt Me At Twilight by Lisa Kleypas is available in several formats. It's also widely available in libraries and online retailers. Details on her website [https://www.lisakleypas.com/books.html]. Next Episode: In the next episode, Dana and Rachel will dive into the plot of Tempt Me at Twilight — including the "squishy" external goal problem, how the tropes do the heavy lifting in a story without a concrete external conflict, and what writers can learn from it. Join the Conversation: Like what you heard? Subscribe, leave a review, and share your thoughts. Follow Story Deep Dive at storydeepdive.com [http://www.storydeepdive.com] and connect with Dana and Rachel to keep the discussion going! This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit storydeepdive.substack.com [https://storydeepdive.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

3 de may de 20261 h 2 min