r liwappily _Ever After ome days, Jan Greenberg does her own laun- dry. She walks the dog. She cleans. She goes to the grocery store. But don't be fooled by appear- ances. This is not :just any other • mortal. When she sits down at her computer, Jan Greenberg enters a completely different realm. Here, there's no • new dishwashing liquid bursting with cleaning power, no embarrassing static cling, no need for Weight Watchers. Instead, it is a world of Camillas and Lady Brittanys and Lord Phillips, of intrigue and suspense, of damsels and dashing men, true love and stories that — sigh — always end happily ever after. Jan Greenberg, of West Bloomfield, is a romance writer. The author of 10 books, she writes under the pseudo- nym Jill Gregory. Her most recent work, pub- lished this month by Dell, is Forever After, the story of a feisty maiden named Camilla and the handsome, bold lord whose heart she wins. Mrs. Greenberg's career began in Chicago, where she was born and raised. Twelve years ago, she settled in West Bloom- field with her husband and daughter. As a child, "I wanted to be an English teacher," she says. "I never actual- ly thought I could be a writer; those were people who lived far away on some mountaintop, not ordinary people." But after she read a few romances, she real- ized, "I can do that." It was the late 1970s, just as the romance novel industry was coming into its heyday. Before then, romance novels were essentially short books with about as much personality as overcooked spaghetti — little mystery, no intrigue, predictable plots. Then people like Danielle Steele came along. Today, romances account for some 70 per- cent of all books sold, and the Romance Writers of America organization boasts 6,200 members. Mrs. Greenberg decid- ed she wanted to set her first book during the American Revolution. The work began at her local library. "I read books on ship building (which features prominently in the story) and about the Revolu- tion," she says. Then she wrote two drafts of what would become Two Distant Shores — includ- ing one version in long- hand. (Today, she uses only a word processor.) Once the novel was complete, Mrs. Green- berg returned to the library, where she looked at guides like The Writer's Market. The next step was sending her book out. In what those in the industry would consider a minor miracle, Two Distant Shores was accepted by the second publisher who saw it. Though always confident the book would sell, Mrs. Greenberg was surprised by the news. "I was flying," is the way she puts it. (Or, in the language of the genre: breathless, she sat on her elegant couch and began to take it all in. "Could it be?" she gasped, knowing that her life would, from this moment forward, change irrevocably and forever.) Mrs. Greenberg doesn't have her head up in the clouds any longer. She has an agent, an acute sense of what makes a successful book (her Wayward Heart was on the New York Times best-seller list) and a work ethic that would please Karl Marx him- self. The actual writing of a romance, she explains, is anything but romantic. First comes the synop- sis. Inevitably, it will feature Character A (let's call her Lydia) and Character B (let's call him Ridge). Everyone knows that Lydia and Ridge are eventually going to get together, but first the path of true love must run a rocky course. That Ridge + Lydia + problems + happy ending = a romance novel, though, is putting it too simply. "You absolutely need a good story to tell, a moving plot that's entertaining with well-developed charac- ters," Mrs. Greenberg says. Flexibility is a must, too. A writer may start out think- ing Ridge and Lydia will marry in Tahiti, "but lots of times your characters will take you in a differ- ent direction," Mrs. Greenberg says. r 31