San Antonio Public Library discussion
Series. . .Blessings or Evil Incarnate?
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Cris
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Jul 10, 2020 07:51AM

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I've taken many a chance on series that haven't been completed. In some cases, you have to. Joel Rosenberg's Guardians of the Flame series never really finished; he stopped writing them in 2003 without resolving a central conflict, then died in 2011. Steven Brust's Vlad Taltos series has been ongoing since 1983. He's projected 19 books (one for each of 17 houses, plus Taltos, for Vlad himself, and The Last Contract, for when he goes to kill a god), and is producing one every few years or so (with some detours for other books, and other series set in the same world). The Halfblood Chronicles by Andre Norton and Mercedes Lackey was a stand-alone book... that became a series... that seems to have ended because Andre Norton died.
With longer series, reading the whole thing at a go can be really distracting, as well... you notice things that the author, writing years later, seems to have forgotten... bits of characterization, small details and the like... because you're bingeing on a work that took a marathon.
With longer series, reading the whole thing at a go can be really distracting, as well... you notice things that the author, writing years later, seems to have forgotten... bits of characterization, small details and the like... because you're bingeing on a work that took a marathon.

I'm waiting to read any further in Martin's A Song of Fire and Ice series. I'll probably read it regardless of whether it's finished or not--but I want to know if I get a series ending before I get too deep.

Worst parts about series? Accidentally starting in the middle. Picking up a fairly sequential series and finding, oops, you're smack dab in the middle of the story, missing a lot of characterization that was done in the earlier books, and having to deal with the plot-catch-up summaries that they shoe-horn in.
Of course, those can also be downsides to marathoning a series... "Ok, here's the few pages where we MIGHT introduce new information, but we're mostly going to be catching up the people who haven't read the series, or who read the first book three years ago."
Of course, those can also be downsides to marathoning a series... "Ok, here's the few pages where we MIGHT introduce new information, but we're mostly going to be catching up the people who haven't read the series, or who read the first book three years ago."