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Do you prefer to read a series all in one go?
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Personally, I wish I hadn't as I love the hype and excitement involved with waiting for the next installment. This is what happened for me with the Harry Potter series (which I joined when book 2 was released) and His Dark Materials.

I agree. I also think they have captured the feel of all the characters and the relationships between them even if they gave different explanations for some bits.
Andy wrote: "Personally, I wish I hadn't as I love the hype and excitement involved with waiting for the next installment."
I'm the opposite :P I find that hype is often really hard to live up to so I prefer to skip that if I can. I try really hard not to get excited about books or films so they're not graded on a higher curve. Walking in blind it's harder to be disappointed, but when you're expecting great things, it's much harder for the book to live up to your expectations. Except when they're _that_ good. For example, I found Dune lived up to its reputation and GoT is just as amazing as everyone made it out to be so far.

Thanks to the Kindle I'm completely out of the hardback game, so I no longer pay that much attention to publishing dates. I just keep adding titles to my private wishlist on Amazon and get around to the series usually when the last volume is about to be released.

In rereading this, I think I may need professional help.

Except LOTR came out AFTER ww2

Me either. I'm continually baffled by boxed sets of series. I've always thought, what if you buy the box set but hate the first book? Eeeek The pressure!
Brenda, LOTR was first published in 1954.


And JRR fought in the First World War, which is something that is worth bearing in mind when people think that his tale mirrors the Second world war


Me either. I'm cont..."
And what if the "boxed" set only includes the first three books... then it looks weird on your shelf when you get the rest of the series (I got the first three Michael Scott Nicholas Flamel books as a birthday present in a box... I think I am going to throw the box itself away... as I got the rest of the series in hard-back... at least then it won't look so weird.) LOL


Usually, the author has all the books in the series written. They are in existence! Sitting on her thumb drive or mainframe, piled up in sheaves of manuscript. She wrote all three or four or nine volumes, years ago.
Why aren't these sequels HERE, on the bookstore shelf? Don't they know you are going crazy, waiting to find out what happens? Aha -- that's where the publisher is hedging its bet. They put out one, maybe two volumes, to see if they would take off. No? Nobody much bought them? Then they haven't invested the money to print vols. 3-8, or however many they were.
Tough on you, the reader. Misery on the poor frustrated author. Fine, however, for the corporate stockholders, who are the only important people in this equation. What can you do about it? There's no point in pounding on the author, who I assure you would see them in print if he could. Yell at the publisher.




Pros: I know what is going on, cliffhangers are not as annoying, I feel very attached to the characters and series arc
Cons: repetitive material to catch up new readers/remind readers what happened previously, author amnesia, little things that would not have bugged me if it was months/years between readings become glaringly obvious and frustrating, lack of character growth or growth that does not make sense, reuse of plot over & over again is much more obvious...
I'm now split on whether I should put time between books in series to see if I can remember enough to follow along while not being as bothered by the long list of cons.

Usually, the author has all the books in the series written. They are in existence! Sitting on her thumb drive or mainframe, piled up in sheaves of manuscript. She wrote all t..."
Considering how many authors I know that have:
a. driven fans batty with the "look I know you want me to finish the next volume, but I've got this other project..." posts on their websites or
b. written series that go on forever with the books further and further apart and people starting to wonder if the author painted himself/herself into a corner, or
c. had to take a break from writing because of severe illness/depression/accident, or
d. died and either left the series unfinished or another author was brought in to tie up the ending,
I have a feeling the "it's all done well in advance" crowd are actually the minority. An outline, maybe. Written, no.
P.S. Tasha, the "one book in the series per month" is working pretty well for me to balance the "YES I KNOW" against the "who are you again".

Thanks that's good to know. I'll try that with the next series. I had no problems with Ilona Andrews or Patricia Briggs but Kim Harrison and Chloe Neill did not work reading one book after the other.


Then factor in the length of the series such as the Dresden series--5+ novels and I need to read them in batches. If it is a trilogy then I like to read them all in one go.
AND THEN add in how much I like the series and prioritize them. Perfect example the Coldfire Trilogy by C.S Friedman---all the novels are out and published but I read the first and put it on the backburner to keep up with the Newsflesh Trilogy. It's all very convoluted and arbitrary honestly. I guess it boils down to my mood at the time. But I definitely can't read 5 books in a series straight though. I need a break in between or else I risk burning out.

Another great completed trilogy I suggest (YA) starts with Everlost and another (adults) starting with God's War.

Brenda, are you talking about a real situation (for yourself, or someone you know)? If so, I have to agree with Jenelle - a great argument for self-publishing (which is the route I chose); but even there you need to be careful and examine the terms. A true self-publisher should retain ZERO rights to the work. One of the reasons I went with Mill City Press is that their contract was clear and readable (without the need for a law degree) -- all of their services were spelled out, quality standards for printing and binding were specified, and they retained NO rights to the material (copyright was in the author's name only). If I decide to go somewhere else, the contract says they must surrender the files to me.
I mean... four YEARS to publish? Mill City got my 400-page first novel out the door in six months from the day I sent them the finished MS(would have been sooner, but they were waiting on me for cover art -- I finally let them do the design on it). They got my second novel finished and out to the booksellers in about four months.
And both of those involved printed books, hardcover and softcover, as well as ebook versions for both Nook and Kindle.

My first novel came out from DAW Books -- the SF and F publisher. I submitted the manuscript over the transom -- an unagented work. It took them a year to get back to me. And that was notably fast! After the acceptance, production -- another 18 months easy.
If a publisher WANTS to get a book out fast, they can do it. A good example is those 'instant' books that come out when somebody like Princess Diana or Michael Jackson dies. A paper book can hit the stands within the month.

On the other hand, as someone once remarked over in the Indie Book group, self-publishers don't have any investment in the book after it is published, i.e. no incentive to go out and sell it. Mark Levine of Hillcrest Media told (warned) me that 95% of self-published books sell less than 100 copies. Once a self-published book is out the door, it's the author who has to promote and market it.


How about writing a good book? I've downloaded 1000 "free books" and as many "free samples" of lower priced books. Thank you Kindle! How many of these books impressed me? Very, very few. Hugh Howey and John Locke are 2 of the most successful self-publishers. Sure, they promoted their work but the reason they sold so many after getting it out there is because the actually wrote great books and you could tell from the first chapters you were on to something.
Most self-publishing is horrible and revels itself immediately. The introductions are "Professor John Smith stood in his lab at Berkshire University". Oh boy, this should be pretty dull. No doubt it will have reviews (5 star) by people who miraculously reviewed 1 book in their lifetime (don't you realize how easy it is to validate a review) and the names are as unimaginative as possible. So, you can promote this stuff all day long and it won't sell or be widely distributed even at FREE.
Good grief, don't you people STUDY how to write? There is a way to involve your reader and you seem to completely ignore all the rules of making your story interesting.
GIGO.

There is, however, a difference between limited-service vanity presses and full-blown publishing service providers. I doubt there are very many self-published authors who really do everything without using a service provider of some kind - even if only to hire a copy editor, or just to get the book printed and bound. Ebooks, of course are a lot easier to self-publish, but even there most authors will deal with a service provider (e.g. Amazon) to distribute the book. Sure, you can do it via your own website (which you could conceivably design yourself); but even then, you are using an ISP to get it out there on the web.
Honestly, I never thought about all the needed services until I started looking into self-publishing; and then I ended up going with a service provider that offered just about everything. I'm not just talking about the typical "package" that most of the vanity presses offer. A full-service provider will have a lot of a la carte services as well, everything from copy editing and proofreading to cover design and artwork, and not just a standard "distribution" package but marketing services as well. Some even give you the choice to go with print-on-demand or a regular press run (cheaper per copy, but with a required minimum volume).
Yes, authors who go that route do receive most of the proceeds directly (after paying up front for whatever services they need), and they do have the incentive to promote and sell the book themselves. And yes, I'm facing the dilemma you mention right now, as the time to promote my existing books is taking the time I need to finish writing the third book in the series.
But going back to Brenda's point, I'm able to do it on my own schedule, not that of a traditional publisher; and I retain all of the rights to my work. So if the publication of my next book is delayed because I'm busy promoting this one, I have no one to blame but myself.
Oh... and Jed, you are absolutely right as well. If, after I've spent all that money on publishing services and made all that effort to promote it, my book tanks anyway... well, I guess I have no one but myself (and my writing) to blame for that, either.
On the other hand, I'm still not going to give it away for free. People rarely appreciate anything they get for free; but maybe that's because most free stuff is worth just what you pay for it.
... and I may publish that next book anyway, just because there are two or three readers out there who actually liked the last book and want to read it. But that again is a choice you can make when you are self-published. :-)


John wrote: "OK -- you've caught me out on the terminology. You are absolutely right. In the end, the only real "self-publisher" is the author (whether he or she uses a service provider or not).
There is, howe..."

Then, a couple of years ago, I let some other people read the books (until then, no one had read them but me). They came back and said "Hey... you should publish these." So I looked into it and found that some amazing changes had come to the publishing world, and self-publishing wasn't the low-budget, vanity-only thing it used to be. I started reworking the books to bring them up to date, polish them up, and trim them to a reasonable length, and last year I published the first one. Now, this month, I've published the second. I'm NOT going to publish that third already-completed one yet, because I really need to fill in that missing generation in the story.
How do you become a writer?... Well, I think it was Asimov who said the first thing you have to do is write.
How do you become a published writer? OK... THAT takes a little more work; and it's still no guarantee you'll become a successful published writer. But hope springs eternal...
Brenda, I feel your pain; and at my age, my remaining life is probably a lot shorter than yours; but I'm not quitting, and neither should you. Write, girl...
This thread is about "series" books, and while it is not Science Fiction, I have to admire what Patrick O'Brian managed to do. He wrote TWENTY novels in a single series (the Master and Commander series, whence came the movie of the same name), and he died writing the 21st. He left behind a wonderful set of stories, and he never quit writing.
I am showing my ignorance here, but I had absolutely no idea Master & Commander, which I have on DVD, was based on a book. Oops!

I spend more time as a social media coach telling people to get back to writing than I do telling them to do more marketing. I think a lot of people are confusing things. It's not marketing that you should be focusing on its building relationships and if you are writing and talking about things that honestly interest you that should not be really hard to do.
Brenda I see your time here as marketing when you are involved in discussions about books or concepts. It's the right kind of marketing in my opinion. The more I get to know you the more likely I am to buy your books... Well I'm biased we've met a few times in real life and have mutual friends although I'm not sure you'd recognize my real name (Tasha Lennhoff) as you see my pen/business name more.

Chris, what pleasures lie before you! there are TWENTY books about Jack Aubrey; you can be entertained for years. My only advice to you is to read them in order. Do not skip! M&C is sometimes called a roman fleuve -- a very long work, a novel broken into 20 separate books.

But do take Brenda's advice -- read the books in order. The first four are:
- Master and Commander
- Post Captain
- HMS Surprise
- The Mauritius Command
While the movie was called "Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World" (which is the title of the TENTH book), it actually combined elements from several books in the series.
I read the series before I saw the movie; but I have to admit that Russell Crowe portrayed Jack Aubrey exactly as I imagined him.
Enjoy!!
Awesome! I am getting jolly excited to pick the series up, I freakin love that movie! Thanks all

GIGO. ..."
Absolutely true, I'm afraid you got what you paid for :-)


Actually, (IMHO) the people who post here (on Goodreads in general) are probably far better writers than the average person. At least, they seem to have a higher degree of technical proficiency with the English language. Of course, that's just a starting point for a fiction writer. As Brenda notes, you have to deal with plot, character development, etc.; but unfortunately, there are still people out there who think they can write who have not even mastered the technical skills of grammar and punctuation, let alone learned how to handle a good metaphor.
Hey... every teenaged male seems to think that a driver's license qualifies him as an auto mechanic. It's been that way since the days of Henry Ford. The writing equivalent (being able to read qualifies one to be a writer)has probably been around since the days of the Greek philosophers. :-)


For David Edding's Belgariad Series and subsequent ones, I had to wait for each book to come out. Actually, both my husband and I had to wait and then we'd squabble over who got to read it first. At the end of each book, I couldn't believe he'd stopped there. However, looking back, this series gave us pleasure for years and the books stacked up nicely on the shelves.
Asimov's books, like Foundation series and Robot series, I could read as fast as I could lay my hands on them. I would soak in that particular world for weeks or months.
My favorite place is a standalone story with a resolution that leaves me with a satisfied glow but enough ongoing threads and places to go that I'm actively looking forward to the next instalment. I am anti books sold on a chapter by chapter basis. For me, I know that until I've written that last word, and edited a thousand times (or so it feels) that first chapter is not complete. I learn so much about the characters through writing the whole arc that I need to go and fix inconsistencies up front. To be fair, that's a problem a whole series of books can face, but once you've published the first story you need to stick with the rules already set up.
Books mentioned in this topic
Fever Crumb (other topics)Everlost (other topics)
God's War (other topics)
A Game of Thrones (other topics)
The Hampton Summit (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Ilona Andrews (other topics)Patricia Briggs (other topics)
Kim Harrison (other topics)
Chloe Neill (other topics)
Joe McKinney (other topics)
More...
When I started watching the tv series I was a bit dismayed about this but the way I look at it now is if having a taste of the good stuff leads the tv viewers to read the books I am happy
I plan to re-read them later thus year once I have read all the short books on my kindle so I can prop my yearly book reading challenge total up before I go and lose 3 months of my life reading these things....