Support for Indie Authors discussion
Fun
>
It got big. Ever had to spit a book into a series?
date
newest »

Yes, I have. That's Breath of the Titans: The False Titanbringer for me. I started out to write it as one book, and before I knew it it was a trilogy. Was a lot of fun to write though, so it didn't matter. As for how I broke them up, I just followed the typical book pattern. Build and build and build to a climax with a sharp drop off. Find one of those moments, and break the book there. Course, others will probably tell you more "Technical" ways to do it, but my thought is if it feels natural to you, it's probably natural. AND your book may not need to be split, even if it is three times as long as your average book.
Yes. My novel got to 175k words and it was still growing. I had a decision, cut it down drastically or cut it in half. I chose the latter. What originally was thought to become a two-part series now is projected to be a trilogy.
Morris
Morris

Now I just have to finish the novel.

Do you have any advice for beefing up what you thought was a plot element in one complete novel into, say, a blockbuster climax for book one of a trilogy?

I have the impression, from reviews I've seen, that cliffhangers are not popular, especially when the work is by a new author. It seems to be better if the first book ends with a satisfactory resolution that points to the second book.
When the ending seems forced or abrupt, I see reviewers making comments about selling "half a book" and more than a couple of reviewer saying that can hurt.
It's also best to finish the whole thing and then release the installments around 4 months apart. Readers seem to like consistency.

That said, I still had a big story (185k words), but readers like thick juicy novels in my genre, Historical Fiction. Mebbe Romance should be juicy but not thick... Donno.
Editing for quality aside, I wouldn't cut a story down just to create a shorter book; 200k isn't outrageous these days (unless you're going POD perhaps). And definitely I agree with Owen, readers hate completus interruptus in their story line.

It did turn out longer than anticipated, but nothing crazy. The second part to it was covering an 8-year period in which several of the main supporting cast went missing from the first book.
So it wasn't a prequel, nor a sequel...it was actually contemporary (or concurrent) to the main plot of the first book--a concurrquel?
So I often thought about putting both of them together into one big door stopper sized book. But I never finished book 2. And even if I had, I'd probably look at the combined book and realize I should split it into a trilogy!

$5.99 for a novella? How many pages? You mention shipping is killing your product, so I am assuming paperback, right? Do I take it that you are not doing an ebook version? If you are and need assistance, let me know and if I am interested, I'll help you.
Morris
Morris


We did that on our third book. We had a main novel (120,000+ words), short novel/novella (~50,000 words) that follows months later in the plot line, and a plot thread that grew into a short novel/novella (unfinished at this point) that is contemporaneous with the main novel.
We couldn't figure out what to do. They are all quite different. We ended up bundling the novel and short novel/novella that follows it. We will be releasing the short novel/novella that is contemporaneous later. We did that mainly because short novels/novellas don’t seem to do well in many cases, and we didn’t want to price it at $0.99. We also felt that the main novel wasn’t going to be especially popular with many of our readers, but the novella would be. So we hoped they’d be stronger as a bundle.
I have no idea if this was a good plan. Reception has been mixed although it still sold pretty well. I think some people may have tended to ignore the second part (the short novel/novella) -- there’s a sense of that in some of the reviews. I think it was disconcerting to some people to have two such different stories released together.
Overall, I don’t think we’d try that approach again.
Karlie wrote: "Has anyone had experience with their word count ballooning to the point that it appears you don't have a single novel, you have a series?"
Sort of. Twice.
Once was back in the nineties when I really only wrote for myself. I began writing a novel about superheroes and the next thing I knew I had eight or ten novels. Or more. I don't recall. It became quite a saga.
More recently, I set out to write a book of one hundred short stories, each one thousand words. But, I decided to chop it up to six books of sixteen or seventeen stories each.
Sort of. Twice.
Once was back in the nineties when I really only wrote for myself. I began writing a novel about superheroes and the next thing I knew I had eight or ten novels. Or more. I don't recall. It became quite a saga.
More recently, I set out to write a book of one hundred short stories, each one thousand words. But, I decided to chop it up to six books of sixteen or seventeen stories each.
I don't balloon, I blimp!
- I had an idea for a 3000ish word short story written on a torn off piece of notepad paper.
- After a week of sitting on the counter that short story note had become a nine chapter book. 30,000ish words
- After five chapters of writing it became a three part epic fantasy series of approximately 500,000 words.
- Now it has plans to become a franchise. The second series has spontaneously started a spreadsheet on my computer and the third is floating around in space!
- I had an idea for a 3000ish word short story written on a torn off piece of notepad paper.
- After a week of sitting on the counter that short story note had become a nine chapter book. 30,000ish words
- After five chapters of writing it became a three part epic fantasy series of approximately 500,000 words.
- Now it has plans to become a franchise. The second series has spontaneously started a spreadsheet on my computer and the third is floating around in space!
Has anyone had experience with their word count ballooning to the point that it appears you don't have a single novel, you have a series?
How were you able to break down your first novel and plot idea into separate books in a series with their own distinct beginning and end?