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Do you prefer novels to have a happy ending?
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message 51:
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Carol
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Aug 17, 2014 10:26AM

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I find in the books I like best, the endings are resolved and believable.
Mostly I'm just not a fan of loose ends, I like them tied up, the story to feel finished. Yet again, sometimes to the whole point and meaning behind the story requires the ends to be untied to really bring it home. E.G. The Animal Farm by George Orwell, which is open-ended.
Whether it's happy, sad, open-ended or a combination there-of, I think it really depend on what the author is trying to say with the story.
The ending needs to fit the purpose.



The same philosophy may be applied to writers: "Every storyteller's tale ends. It's how well the storyteller ends it that counts." Happy or sad doesn't matter. Whether it's a great or terrible ending does.


I'm very picky about endings. They have to wrap up what's going on with ALL the characters, in a satisfactory way. For example, in Twilight, I'm so dissatisfied with the girl-wolf's ending that I want to write HER novel -- explain what happes to her, and WHY she got dealt such a bad hand! In Hunger Games, why does the final win come from MURDER?! and what are we teaching kids with such a finish? Great writing, gripping story, ruined by that horrible ending.
Authors mentioned in this topic
Scott A. Butler (other topics)Maggie James (other topics)