This last weekend 15-17 August 2025 was the Romance Writers of New Zealand annual conference held in Auckland NZ this year, and entitled Heart of a Story.
I’d forgotten how much I love RWNZ’s conferences. I haven’t been there since before Covid, but this year I decided to attend. Okay, I confess, I was nominated in the 2025 RWNZ Koru Awards in the Best Long Romance section for Masquerade—Choosing Family Book 1. The categories are long romance, short romance, novella, best new book, with marks also used to choose the finalists in the Overall Book of the Year Award.
In case you’re interested, the e-book is available from all major booksellers, while a paperback version can be bought through Amazon or Barnes & Noble.
And to be scrupulously honest, I wanted to be in the room when the results were called, just in case. The competition was fierce so, I arrived with my heart in my mouth.
In the Best Long Romance list, I was up against Alison Roberts, Alyssa J Montgomery and Caroline Corvin. All published by some of the big traditional publishers, whereas I’m with a small independent US publisher called Inkspell Publishing, and believe me, size does matter when you’re trying to find your place in this industry. I was over the moon with my second place, and my table at the Awards dinner, comprising people I didn’t know or had met that day, cheered for me. That’s another thing I like about RWNZ conferences—everyone is a supporter.
Next surprise—my name appeared on the Koru Best Overall Book of the Year. The smile on my face was growing wider and wider. The Award went to Fiona McArthur’s, Healing the Baby Doc’s Heart, (short romance) but I came third. More cheers from my table. You’ve got to love a loud and supportive crowd. To even be in this list is a huge honour.
I’m putting in links because you might fancy checking out their sites to see what sorts of goodies they offer, apart from books, that is.
I couldn’t make it to the Friday workshops, but by all reports they were a huge success.
- Anna Hackett’s was Short Story, Big Impact (<7,500 words). I’m playing with short stories at the moment, so the program notes were particularly helpful. One of the teasers in the program said:
Where does beauty come from in the short story?
Beauty comes from form, from development of idea, from after effect. It often comes from carefulness, lack of confusion, elimination of waste.
Eudora Welty.
Saturday started with keynote speakers. The titles alone are enough to spark your interest, and the author presenters delivered humorous, informative sessions which made me think as well as inspired me.
- Sarah MacLean, The Romance Revolution; The power and purpose of the romance novel in a fast-changing world.
- Rachael Johns, Finding your ‘why and hanging on through doubt, burnout and everything in between
- Steffanie Holmes, Behind the doors of a 7-figure author business.
Impossible to attend all the afternoon sessions, but I chose one on using AI translation services to monetize your backlist and a second on marketing strategies, partly to address my ignorance on AI translation services and to re-energize my marketing approach. What marketing strategy, you may ask? You can see why I needed this session.
More keynotes and panels on Sunday, but the standout of the day for me was Daniel Watterson, The impact of AI on creative rights, a topic every creative needs to learn more about. Daniel has a history as an actor, lawyer and is now protecting creatives’ rights. He was fascinating and provided enough links on where to start in understanding AI’s impacts on writers. I don’t use AI in my writing, apart from spell check and google searches because it’s my stories I want to tell, but the use of AI in a variety of ways from writing a synopsis to a blurb to improving your prose is a live and controversial issue.
A fabulous weekend, all organised and run with the generosity and skill of volunteers. I’m still smiling.
An end point:
As writers, we can always learn, so participating in conferences, joining writers’ groups, touching base with like-minded people always sparks ideas for me. In a recent Australian Romance Readers Association newsletter (Issue: 191 June 2025-available to subscribers) Kelley Armstrong was interviewed. She made a comment that really resonated with me.
What tropes do you most enjoy writing?
My favourite tropes to write are second-chance and friends-to-lovers. Both allow me to start with an established relationship. The characters have a past together, which fast-tracks the romantic arc. Otherwise, I may end up with a very slow burn.
I’ve written a friends to lovers and recently, a second chance novella, but they’re not my preferred tropes. However, I do want my characters to get to know each other before they tumble into bed, despite almost immediate attraction. My books have been described by some readers as slow burn. Please note: not “very slow burn””. Kelley Armstrong gives a very good reason why.
You can find me and my books here: website FaceBook Instagram
Find me on
- Instagram https://www.instagram.com/romanceauthorjen/
- Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/jenniferrainesauthor
- Goodreads—https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/22577889.Jennifer_Raines
- Bookbub – https://www.bookbub.com/authors/jennifer-raines
- Diana Kathryn Penn’s Indie Reads Aloud podcast has recordings of me reading the opening 20 mins of my books:
- Betrayal—Choosing Family Book 3 (episode 212)
- Quinn, by design—Choosing Family Book 2 (episode 208)
- Masquerade—Choosing Family Book 1 (episode 188)
- Lela’s Choice (episode 143)
- Planting Hope (episode 101)
- The Anderson Sisters (episode 54 Taylor’s Law and 80 Grace Under Fire) http://www.dkpwriter.com/indie-reads-aloud-podcast.html
You can also contact me directly via the contact page on my website if you have any other questions.
