Author_without

I started Hate Me Later, and Alexis caught my attention right away because her distance doesn’t feel random, it feels like something she uses to protect herself. I like when enemies-to-lovers starts with tension that has an emotional reason behind it, not just banter. I’m writing Sophie and Marco with betrayal, pride, and a very painful push-pull dynamic, so I wanted to ask: when you write a heroine who keeps people at a distance, how do you decide when to let the reader see what she is really afraid of?

Michealjohn12h8

@Author_without hello  we have 1,400 readers here that will love to ask some questions and host you tho
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katelynkealohilani

Thank you so much! ❤️ That honestly means a lot because Alexis’s walls were always meant to feel protective rather than random. For me, I usually let the reader see glimpses of what a character is afraid of before I fully explain it. Little reactions, moments where they pull away, or things they avoid talking about. That way the reader feels there’s something deeper there before they know exactly what it is. And now I’m curious about Sophie and Marco because betrayal and a painful push-pull dynamic sounds like my kind of drama 
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ivy_2989

Girl your book is amazing. I'd be whipped for malakai. He is soo like setting the standards high. Their bantering>> is chefs kiss also him supporting her? I'd enroll for Westbrook uni so bad just for him. If it existed.

katelynkealohilani

Aww yaay! im glad you enjoy it so far! It gets even better trust me. Lol id enroll myself too honestly 
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Sissilia01

Hi ‍♀️ I just discovered your book and your story sounds really cool  But could I ask you to change the title of your book pleas ? I am also a weiter on Wattpad and Your book title is actually the title of my book which I've already published (and am currently writing), and if I advertise it on TikTok or Instagram now, it's confusing because my readers will be presented with two books... do you understand  Would that be okay, please?