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Influenced to write a series?
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Justin
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Sep 19, 2013 10:14PM

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Certainly, series tend to be where the money is at, as people latch on to a character and suddenly want to follow them around. In my mind though, unless you planned out a series from the beginning, there are two questions to be asked.
1. Did you create an in-depth world enough to support a series?
2. Will a series suffer from the "Jack Bauer effect"? Basically, this means, will a series do more harm than good?
For the uninitiated, Jack Bauer was the main character in the series 24. The premise of the show was every episode was an hour long, and over the course of a season (24 episodes) we followed Jack Bauer as he had to avert disaster. I liked the first season. But then the show went on for seven more and all I could do, was ask "How many bad days can one guy have?". So, I coined the phrase "Jack Bauer effect", which speaks to the idea that dragging a character into a series that was never planned can actually break the suspension of disbelief required to enjoy the series.


For my second book about a genetic virus with no zombies or aliens it's about surviving. I have no problem with scope or possibilities and I almost split the book in two as it's 150,000 words anyway! I have not started one and I could do side stories, other POV's as well as taking the story forward in time from the ending.
My third book - no chance and I wouldn't want to
One of my current projects is looking like a series and I am setting it up that way as a sci-fi space opera. I have even set up a blog for the setting and back story. There will be a virtually limitless scope for story-telling, if I want to tell the stories. Mind you as I write I may decide to finish it because I'm fed up with the characters. Another alternative is to write short pieces and these might be added to the blog rather than published as books in their own right.


But the most important thing to come out of it is that there are two characters, a dwarf and a female archmage who both deserve their own series.
So, indirectly from what started as one book has spawned many, and two new characters will get their own individual series. My god, I’ll be 80 before I finish writing haha.
Harrison

I'd say that a book deserves to be turned into a series if the author has more to tell about his/her world and characters. Any other reason (publisher/readers pressure, wanting to milk the cow for more cash...) tends to make up for poorer books--at least from what I've experienced so far. (Usually, I find it easy enough to tell: I can "feel" when the author's running on empty, filling in pages just because someone demanded that a next volume be written. Writers who manage to actually make such books interesting get a heartfelt kudos from me.)

I can't seem to get away from sequels.
Harrison


Absolutely.

That's why I haven't pursued series yet. The situations in both my published novels are such that the story is definitively over and the surviving characters aren't going to be interested in any more adventures -- they'll probably run the other way when that "call to adventure" comes again.
I might reuse the world in my latest novel ( South ), but it would be for another standalone, much in the way William Gibson set new stories in The Sprawl without making explicit sequels.


As I said, good series depend on interesting locals.



Also a good point. The way mine is working out is that Book 1 sets the stage but is largely told from the central character's point of view. Book 2 is from the point of view of the central character's companions. Book 3 as planned focuses on the anti-hero and his exploits for a large portion of the book... and so on. I have always agreed a nice, succinct one-stop novel is great. I've never been one of a few words, though. My fingers just fly on the keyboard. The time consuming part is getting the style & form to actually be coherent. I've been described as e e cummings-ish rather than Dickens-ish...Children of Stone: Voices in Crystal

However, the old guideline is that one shouldn't use 'exceptions' when it comes to setting one's own goals. What another writer achieved by fortunate happenstance, is almost never going to be repeatable in the same fluke way, if you try to emulate it deliberately. The luck which some people enjoy occurs because of who they are; rarely is it transferable.
Just my opinion, yep..but I think you'd hear these sentiments re-echoed all through the creative industries.

If you didn't feel creatively inspired to write a sequel in the first place and would prefer to write other stories. Then a sequel would be a bad idea.
I feel that the best works are the ones where you feel compelled to write it. Sure, it's nice when readers want more books from you. But if you don't feel that there is a story you want to tell, they'll just be furious when you create a sequel and end up failing to meet expectation.

If you didn't feel creatively inspired to wr..."
And that's what really scares me... Keeping the interest up. I truly wish I could write one-stop wonders. It has to be some kind of skill I never developed.
Children of Stone: Voices in Crystal


What about Tolkien, one might ask. Well, it was a great adventure but the ending has all the Hobbits satisfied on to go an any other adventures.

~versus~
..conceiving a standalone story which possesses a satisfying resolution and emotional climax, but then (based on its success or its profits) looking for ways to extend it further.

That's not to say all sequels are bad, not in the least. There are many sequels that are better than the originals. But there are far too many that are made only for profit. If the creative forces (whether it's a writer, or a filmmaker, or what have you) behind the original project have nothing left to say, and are only being forced to write a sequel because it "might" make money, then it should be scrapped until the joy of writing and creating such a work is there with a spark of inspiration.
(And don't let this confuse you with actual planned series. Planned series, such as the Harry Potter books, The Hunger Games and the like, are completely different beasts, as the author has a plan of action for each book before even one word is written for the first book.)

Now, stories roamed until they reach the end whether its one book or many. Almost always, I learn after a while what the story is really about and I'm wiser for it.

A sequel can be a comfortable read for a reader. For the author it can be an opportunity to follow a character growing even more than the original story allowed.
Yzabel says it well.
That said, each book in my Hazel Whitmore series can stand alone although each has ties to the others (two done, two in planning) through setting and characters. I find the problem is in finding the conflict for the next book. All are linked as Hazel moves from being a city girl to being more rural which was the original starting idea.


I never intend to write sequels or trilogies because I'm a fan of the standalone book unless of course a book needs to be told more. Sequels tend to be thought out so normally I believe if they are done it's because the author knew it was going to be long or wanted to write a series. The only series I have done are three short stories and the only reason there's a third is because since I reveal nothing in either two I figured I'd write another to tell people what the heck happened in the first two stories. Other than that I try to stick with writing standalones however I know other fellow authors on here who write series.
Books mentioned in this topic
Voices in Crystal (other topics)Voices in Crystal (other topics)
Voices in Crystal (other topics)
South (other topics)