Making "Indelible" into a Series

When I first presented an earlier version of "Indelible" to the Alameda Writers Group's Fiction SIG (Special Interest Group) it was shorter, far less edgy and had a fish-head prologue that I had been convinced to add by a very large Romance Publisher, to meet their guidelines for a Romantic Suspense. The prologue was added to tone down "frightening" aspects of my opening chapter.

Thanks to the AWG, I removed said prologue, pretty much left the opening the way it had originally been, and revised from there. The framework for the book was always in place. What I added was more meat, more conflict and more thrills for the ride. I also brought Brian Swift's brother, and Kaylen Roberts' boyfriend, Tim Madison, out of the shadows and made him into a flesh and blood character, although he's never actually on-stage.

This book, which my then-agent marketed as a Romantic Suspense, was actually a mainstream Mystery/Suspense with some romantic elements, and could never meet the Romance industry's restrictive guidelines even while hiding behind a curtain pulled by a 3 page intro.

As the months rolled by and the pages of my revised and lengthened manuscript were presented at the SIG, another member of the AWG kept telling me that "Indelible" was the first book in a series.

I kept disagreeing. "Indelible" was a stand-alone. However, as the book progressed and the sub-plots developed, I realized she was correct--this was, indeed, a series. Listening to critique group members in this wonderfully supportive and insightful group led me onto a different path, and the one to publication.
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Published on August 17, 2014 16:38 Tags: critique-groups, critiquing, indelible-series, series, stand-alone, writers-groups
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message 1: by Paula (new)

Paula I love series fiction! I have at least six series on my reading list. It's a great way to keep readers coming back and to get new readers to buy your backlist.

Twenty-one and counting:
http://www.evanovich.com/novels/plum-...


message 2: by Heather (new)

Heather Ames I love a good series, too, Paula. I'm still reading Sue Grafton's and wondering what she'll do with the last book. Characters become old friends you want to keep safe and do well. Of course, they don't, which is why you keep going back for more.


message 3: by Paula (new)

Paula I love the Miss Julia series and the Aunt Dimity series (which begain as a one-off, I think). Chet the Dog is another great series.


message 4: by Heather (new)

Heather Ames Paula wrote: "I love the Miss Julia series and the Aunt Dimity series (which begain as a one-off, I think). Chet the Dog is another great series."

I love the covers for the Chet books. I skimmed one, but wasn't completely drawn in at the time. I should go back and take a second look. Sometimes my mood just isn't into something on a particular day. That can backfire on me. I just picked up a book that I'm going to abandon. Not my cup of tea, although I've enjoyed other books by the same author.


message 5: by Paula (new)

Paula I hear you. I love the Stephanie Plum series, but just didn't click with the author's non-Steph novels.


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