Gamblnluck
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Sep 16, 2020
- Posts
- 997
I stumbled into 2 very long stories, Slave Camp, and Gotta Pay the Piper. I had no intention to making them long when I started. After a bit, they became soap operas. Think of the never ending General Hospital on television. I had my conclusion for the end of Slave Camp long before I got there. I just had more story lines to tell in the process.I know I’m probably boring people to death about writing my first novel. But…
One thing I struggle with is, the protagonist was very fixated on X in Part II, but the story has moved on by Part IV, and now they don’t seem to care that much about X.
I find myself constantly having to either write a graceful off ramp for X, or adding bits to say they still care about X, as X will be a big deal again in Part VI.
What aspects of longer works do you find challenging?
Characters come and go, they fill the screen for a time and then fade away. Various sub-plots appear. You don't really need an off-ramp. Just have X take up less space in the narrative. You could have him or her reappear at times.
Now, I'll admit, this is a weak way to plot out a novel. Gotta Pay the Piper is now 63 chapters. It is longer than War and Peace which is less than 600k words..