Wednesday, January 2, 2019

About Book Series by Cindy J. Smith at #OurAuthorGang

About Book Series
by Cindy J. Smith


I read a lot.  I love picking up a book and getting lost in another place and time.  Living a life I had never dreamed of or even thought possible.  Yes, books are the vehicles that offer me a vacation from my reality, if only for a short period of time.

I will try reading almost any genre, with only a few exceptions.  And, until recently, there were only 2 books I started to read but couldn't finish.  The House Of Seven Gables was one of the two and I did finally read the entire book. The other, A Tale Of Two Cities will never be read, I mean Dickens couldn't even decide on the setting!

With the deluge of Indie books out there, I have been choosing to spend my money on these types of books.  Now my unfinished/never to be finished list has grown considerably.  Poorly edited works or ones whose storylines do not seem to make any sense are now left to gather dust in my kindle. It makes me sad when I know with a little more effort the idea they based the books on would have been a fantastic book.

Although this does frustrate me, my real pet peeve is "series" and "cliffhangers". It seems lately almost every Indie Author is writing a series.  You pick up a book and are totally enthralled. Then the pages run down and you see the book is not going to be able to pull everything together.  The author says the next installment is in the works.  So you wait...and you wait.

Then they release a "prequel" to explain how the story actually began.  Following this book, they reissue the first book with a new cover saying it has been "re-edited".   While you are still waiting to know the end.  Years pass and you are still waiting.  The author has decided to start a new series.  It does sound intriguing but you want to know how the first book ended!

To be fair, Indies are not the only authors doing this.  King did his Dark Tower series and by the time he got around to writing the final book, it was obvious even he was sick of it.  Harry Potter seemed the same to me, with the last books missing the enthusiasm.  Lord Of The  Rings and King's The Green Mile were not technically series, they were installment stories.  A deadline for each new section was planned.  Both were well written and fully developed by the authors.

I want to read entire books. I want the whole story. Right now I have 8 different authors "series" that have been waiting for the next installment for years!  I do not remember the characters anymore.  I do not care about them anymore.  Life is too short to have to reread books to be able to figure out how the current situation came about.  If you must write a series...finish it.  Do not keep reissuing the same book over and over.  Do not write "prequels" or character books to explain how everyone became the character you wrote.  Save those books until after YOU FINISH!

Personally, I have started looking in the descriptions to see if books are being promoted as part of a series.  If they are, I don't purchase them.  If I discover, after the purchase that I am in possession of an unfinished story, I don't buy from the author again. Be upfront.  Tell us it is "book 1 of 2" or "book 1 of 14"!  I will gladly buy the entire set when it is done. Your fans are waiting! But even loyal fans have expiration dates.
 Cindy J. Smith

Who am I you ask?  Well, I am a poet and originally from Avon, NY.  I live in Indiana now with my husband.  I'm an older person, not quite as old as dirt. As far back as I can remember, I have written poetry, and with every experience in life, I've found inspiration.  (I really just write what the voices in my head tell me to write.) Never having been good at playing the part of "starving artist", I've had many careers, and I just recently retired from being an over-the-road truck driver with my husband Dave. For the past 13 years, it has provided amazing opportunities for inspiration.  I am now able to sit at home and "eat bonbons and watch soap operas" as I always dreamed. (Actually I have never had a bon-bon and I hate soap operas.) I have published 5 poetry books and my children's book, Caesar and the Bluebells, was republished with new illustrations. More of my poetry has appeared in anthologies as well as several books by fellow authors.

COMMENTS

Erika M Szabo via Google+

4 weeks ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Today. Toi Thomas is talking about a beloved children’s story, Alice in Wonderland at #OurAuthorGang
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Thanks for sharing.

Erika M Szabo

4 weeks ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Makes me want to read it again! Great post :)
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It's still a fun story.

nicola L Osguthorpe

2 weeks ago  -  Shared publicly
 
I also love the magical element of the gardens Alice explores in this book. I enjoyed your post Toi.
 
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Tricia Drammeh shared this via Google+

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Alexandra Butcher

3 weeks ago  -  Shared publicly
 
I once played the executioner, and an aardvark in the play of Alice in Wonderland. I think it was an aardvark...

Great story anyway.
 
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Alexandra Butcher via Google+

3 weeks ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Check out this post
 
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P. J. Mann shared this via Google+

4 weeks ago  -  Shared publicly
 
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Ruth de Jauregui via Google+

4 weeks ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Toinette Thomas shares another garden in literature -- the famous gardens of Alice in Wonderland. Stop by #OurAuthorGang to revisit this classic and read Toi's take on it!
 
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Ruth de Jauregui

4 weeks ago  -  Shared publicly
 
A great post! I love Alice in Wonderland. It's fun and interesting for a kid and has plenty of dark shadows to interest an adult. Thank you, Toi!
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Joe Bonadonna

4 weeks ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Another great post, Toi! Haven't read Alice in Wonderland in Decades. Time to take my copy down from the shelf.
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Yes, reread it a few years ago. Still, good.

Joe Bonadonna via Google+

4 weeks ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Today on #OurAuthorGang, author Toinette Thomas​ gives us another interesting installment of her Gardens of Good and Evil, in which she discusses Alice in Wonderland.
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Chris Weigand

4 weeks ago  -  Shared publicly
 
I don't think I have ever read Alice in Wonderland, so your interpretations of the story are intriguing and I may have to go back and read it.
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I find that I see things in stories that others may not, so keep that in mind. Still, it's worth reading.

Chris Weigand via Google+

4 weeks ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Alice in Wonderland, gardens. Who knew. Journey with Toi into this fascinating world.
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Toi Thomas via Google+

4 weeks ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Today, I discuss Alice in Wonderland and how it influened me. #OurAuthorGang
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Eva Pasco

4 weeks ago  -  Shared publicly
 
Toi, may your "garden" flourish creatively and intuitively in your story.
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Thank you very much.

Robert Nacke via Google+

3 weeks ago  -  Shared publicly
Erika M Szabo originally shared this
 
Today. Toi Thomas is talking about a beloved children’s story, Alice in Wonderland at #OurAuthorGang
 
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Stephanie Collins via Google+

4 weeks ago  -  Shared publicly
Erika M Szabo originally shared this
 
Today. Toi Thomas is talking about a beloved children’s story, Alice in Wonderland at #OurAuthorGang
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