|
Writing a
Stand-Alone vs. a Series
by Rik Briscoe
While creativity on the author's part typically determines what they want
their work to become, ultimately there are outside forces that make the final call.
Often the publisher will have the final say in all things concerning the length and print
run of a book, but don't think it's a snap decision. Nope. It's based on a "catch
22" formula. A previously published writer is much more likely to be subsequently
published. Also, if their first book sells well the author will almost always be signed to
a second and third book deal, but that doesn't determine if it will be a stand-alone book
or part of a series. Still, a publisher can yank the contract and cancel the third book
even if the second book's sales are doing reasonably well. Go figure!
So, what is the measuring stick? The strength of the characters. Limp noodles caught in
the hurricane that is your story won't make it in the publishing industry. Period. You
have to breathe life into your characters, give them desires, strengths, faults, and
dreams. Your characters have to be bigger than life, ready to step off the pages and get
in the reader's face if necessary. Characters that evoke the entire range of emotions in
the reader are more likely to be around for another book than characters that are as flat
as the paper they're written on.
What if you don't want to write a running series? Well, writing crappy characters just
means that you don't get published, so what you have to do is write a tight story with
good characters and have it wrap up in one nice neat little package so that it doesn't
lend itself easily to a sequel.
Still odd things can happen, and all or none of this may apply when you go to publish your
first or next book.
|
|
|
Thanks Voltaire!
Dragon*Con would like to thank Voltaire for agreeing at the
eleventh-hour to emcee the Dawn Look-Alike Contest Saturday night. You rawk, man!
We love you!
.
|