Tag Archive for: series

Series and Standalones

Series or Standalone? 
By Cathy Perkins

Hitting
today’s Frustration Meter – getting to the end of what you thought was a really
great standalone novel and stumbling onto the words “END OF BOOK
ONE.”  

(Yes, First World Problem.)


Worse yet – ugh – a serial novel.

Or the flip side – you reach the end of a story, and the ending is so
perfect… 


…or
you’re like a food addict and someone just took away your cake. 

“How am I
supposed to live without these characters? What
happens next? How could the author be so cruel?



Which begs the questions: Series or Standalone?



Probably the single biggest advantage to a series is if you like the characters, you can get more of their
story. After a while it becomes comfortable, like hanging out with friends.  I know
these people! I like them – what’s happening?
Over
the course of the series, the characters can change, hopefully improving for
the better, over a more realistic, longer period. As a reader, it’s easier to commit
time and money if the book in a series. If you like the first one, you figure
you’ll like the next one in the series, rather than chancing another random book, even
another book by the same author.
The down side is, if each book in the series doesn’t have a
complete and satisfying story arc of its own, you may feel you’re left hanging
while waiting for the next book.
Books aren’t like TV shows. You
don’t get the next episode a week later. Also,
depending
on the overall story arc of the series, there may be significant threads left
unresolved. This can bother a reader who has to wait for the next book.
Writing a series means every installment has
to be as good as or better than the last. No rehashing of a theme. No cookie
cutter plots. No formulas. Readers deserve to feel their appetite for the adventure was satisfied, and they can’t wait for the next in the series.
Another challenge is
backstory. Can the reader pick up a book in the middle of the series and get
enough backstory for it to make sense? Or do they have to start with book one?
How much backstory does the author include in subsequent books without boring
the dedicated series fan or confusing the mid-series pick-up reader?
Finally, what if a series goes too long?
What if the protagonist keeps falling into the same old danger time after time?
This can result in the B word: boring. You don’t want to go there.
The advantage of writing a standalone is
trying new ideas or themes without the confines of your established setting and
characters. Your readers can discover a new side of your talent. A standalone
for a series author is like an experimental science lab. Just don’t blow up the
place and go so far over the line that your fans don’t recognize you.
What do you think? 
Do you prefer reading
or writing a series or standalones?

Cathy Perkins
After
publishing three standalone novels, I’m easing into the series idea. DOUBLE
DOWN (presale available here) features several of the characters from So About the Money (JC speaks! He
finally gets a point of view!) with events right after “book one”
ends. 
I’m working away on Book Two, so hopefully readers will jump on board
with this new story and series.

Keep in touch at my website or sign up for my newsletter.

Why Do I Keep on Writing?

That’s a good question, one I must ask myself periodically.

I spend a good percentage of each day in front of my computer either working on a new book, editing, or promoting whichever book is out now.  And guess what? I don’t make much money. And what I do make is spent on promotion.

No, my publishers do not send me out on book tours, though they both do some promotion, the greater share is up to me. I’m the one who arranges my in-person events and does the majority of the on-line promotion.

So what do I get out of all this work?

1. I love to write. I enjoy visiting my characters and finding out what is going to happen to them next. The only way to do that is to write the next book. My writing is not confined to my novels, believe it or not, I get a kick out writing blog posts, like this one, and others where I guest.

2. I love meeting people and making new friends. Of course this happens at book events and at conferences and conventions. (Going to a mystery con is very much like attending a huge family reunion.) The Internet has given me the ability to make many new friends, many I’ve known now for a long time.

3. And of course my books have fans–fans that enjoy my books, have favorite characters, email me, read my newsletter and comment, fans that encourage me to write the next book.

4. Because of the conventions, conferences and places I’ve been invited to teach and speak, I’ve traveled many places I’d never have visited otherwise from the West Coast to the East Coast, many cities in-between, and Hawaii and Alaska.

5. I’ve learned how to do many things I might never have tried if it hadn’t been for my writing career from many computer skills to giving presentations and classes about books, writing and publishing. For ten years I taught writing for Writers Digest Schools, and I just recently retired from many years of being the program chair for the Public Safety Writers Association’s annual conference.

6. And most of all, I’ve met many challenges, grown as a writer and a person, and had a great time doing what I wanted to do.

Marilyn aka F. M. Meredith

Saying Goodbye to a Series – A continuing discussion.

Some of you might have seen my post over at Sara WalterEllwood’s blog during THE BULL RIDER’S KEEPER blog tour on my bitter sweet
feeling on letting go of The Bull Rider series. Today, I wanted to talk about the journey. Or as Ron White would say when asked how far the plane would go, “all the way to the crash site.”
THE BULL RIDER’S BROTHER marked my entrance into the
publishing world.  On June 4th,
2012, I became a published author.  The
sweet story about four friends (Lizzie, James, Barb and Jesse) who return to
Shawnee for the town’s annual rodeo weekend, each with their own agenda, taught
me a lot about how to tell a story and how to be an author. Most civilians
(those outside the publishing world) think all the work is in the writing.
Everyone who’s ever published through digital first, traditional or even
self-published will tell a different story. 
Between edits and reviews and promotion, a book takes many hours of time
to show up with the buy me button on Amazon.
As soon as I signed my contract for BRB giving James and
Lizzie their happy ever after, I started writing on THE BULL RIDER’S MANAGER.
This was Barb’s story. I knew she worked too much and didn’t have a strong
family support system going in. Barb’s house was the fun one growing up, the
one without rules. So I knew this had to be about her learning to accept and
finding her own family. How it turned into a wild night in Vegas, I’m not sure,
but I’m glad the story took me there. By November 2012, the book had that
coveted buy button.
Then life happened. Around Easter 2013, I signed a three
book contract for THE TOURIST TRAP MYSTERIES. One book written, the second
started, and a vague idea for book three. 
By the end of the year, I had all three done and ready for their release
dates spanning 2014 (GUIDEBOOK TO MURDER-April 17th, MISSION TO
MURDER –July 31st, and IF THE SHOE KILLS- October 28th).
I’d also started a new, cowboy romance that I thought could
be an amazing series. This got put on the back burner when I signed the
contract.
So as soon as IF THE SHOE KILLS went off to my editor, I
returned to the last book in the Bull Rider series, Jesse’s story.  I’m glad I waited, mostly because Jesse
needed the time to grow and change. And I’m very proud of his character arc
over the three books. Little brother all grown up. THE BULL RIDER’S KEEPER
released April 28th and I closed the door on Shawnee and the four
friends.

But what about the stories I didn’t get to tell. Kadi’s
riding instructor deserves a happy ever after. 
Cash Dillon, the dumped, in THE BULL RIDER’S BROTHER, got his story told
in a novella, SHAWNEE HOLIDAY, exclusively available at Amazon. And then
there’s Angie, the Sullivan brothers crazy mom.
It’s hard to walk away. But I don’t have the time now to
write these stories.
Maybe someday.
Do you have series that you or the author hasn’t finished
that you’re waiting for another book? 

No Children Allowed

Timothy Hallinan has written ten published novels under his own name and several others under pseudonyms. BREATHING WATER, which will be released by William Morrow on August 18, is the third in his new series of Bangkok thrillers that feature an American “rough-travel” writer named Poke (short for Philip) Rafferty and the family he has assembled in Bangkok — his wife, Rose a former bar girl in the notorious Patpong district, and their adopted daughter, Miaow, who was a street child until they took her in. In BREATHING WATER, she’s ten going on 28. The series has received excellent reviews, including some of the elusive trade review “stars,” and the first two books, A NAIL THROUGH THE HEART and THE FOURTH WATCHER, made Ten Best lists both here and abroad. Additionally, all three books have been singled out by the country’s independent bookstores as either monthly picks or notables. Hallinan, who also wrote a six-book series Los Angeles PI series in the 1990s, has lived part of each year in Bangkok since 1981.

It wasn’t until I came to Internet mystery discussion groups that I realized that a large percentage of readers want to read series in order. It had always been my assumption that one goal of writing a series should be to write individual volumes that can be picked up in any sequence. Book Number Three should be a terrific read even for someone who’s never opened Books One and Two.

My first series of novels, featuring the uselessly overeducated LA private eye Simeon Grist, could be read frontward, backward, or sideways. A reader could have picked up Number Four without even knowing there was a Number One.

There are good reasons for series books to work as stand-alones. Let’s say you’re browsing and you pick up a book by a new author. You flip through it and think it might be worth a few hours. And then you realize that it’s the fourth in a series, and you ask yourself, “Am I going to have to read three other books just to get to this one?” That’s enough all by itself to stop some people, but suppose it’s not suppose you look for the first three titles in the series and they’re . . . not . . . there. Guess which book, out of the four you’re toting, is going to wind up back on the shelf. (By the way, this is the main reason many booksellers don’t like series.)

I’m hoping the information that follows will help some poor writer who is thinking about creating a series and would like the books in his or her series to be true stand-alones. A series that booksellers will love.

If so, here is one thing you do not, under any circumstances, want to do.

Do NOT include a child among your primary continuing characters.

When I decided to write a series of Bangkok thrillers about an expatriate American rough-travel writer named Poke Rafferty, I thought it would give him a deeper relationship with Thailand if he’d created a family there. I also thought that doing that would get me away from the lone-wolf private eye stereotype. Within about 30 seconds of making that decision, I realized that Poke came from a broken family, that he had been scarred by his father’s abandonment, and that the family he has pulled together in Thailand is the most important thing in his life.

It’s an unorthodox family, to be sure. His wife, Rose, is a former dancer in Bangkok’s notorious Patpong red-light district. (Yes, “dancer” is a euphemism.) Their daughter, Miaow, was adopted off the Bangkok streets, where she’d been struggling for a living since she was three or four. She’s eight or nine (no one knows for sure) in the first book, A Nail Through the Heart, and she’s going on eleven in the third and newest one, Breathing Water.

And there’s the problem. Those particular years would be a huge amount of time in any kid’s life, but when she’s gone from being a semi-literate street child to being a desperately wanna-be middle class kid in a school where everyone is fancier, richer, and more sophisticated than she is, it’s a geological era. And because the family is at the heart of all the novels – I think of the thriller stories as rites of passage for the family – the installments in Miaow’s development comprise a continuing story, and it can really only be read in one order.

In fact, Miaow’s growth and development comprise the most important element in the family’s life. In the first book, she’s barely off the streets, still learning to read and trying to get used to living eight stories above the ground instead of in doorways and abandoned buildings. By the time of the current one, BREATHING WATER, she’s at the top of her class in international school and vaguely ashamed of ever having lived on the street. In the one I’m writing now, THE ROCKS, she’s playing Ariel in a school production of Shakespeare’s “The Tempest.” And Rose and Poke, as her adoptive mother and father, are deeply involved in all of it.

If I’d realized then the impact Miaow would have on the series, I would have gone ahead and written her anyway, because she’s more fun to write than anyone else in the books.

Tim Hallinan