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Too many cliffhangers

tendres ๐Ÿšซ

I got feedback that I had too many cliffhangers.

I usually have a hook at the end of each chapter to motivate readers to read the next chapter.

Any thoughts?

Redsliver ๐Ÿšซ

Put a cliffhanger at the end of each chapter to motivate your readers to continue. Especially if you are uploading one chapter at a time.

Replies:   Dominions Son  upper
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Redsliver

Put a cliffhanger at the end of each chapter to motivate your readers to continue.

Doing this deliberately, will motivate some readers to STOP reading the story.

Replies:   Keet  Vincent Berg
Keet ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

Doing this deliberately, will motivate some readers to STOP reading the story.

Exactly this. Readers of the complete work expect to have a stop point at the end of a chapter so they can pick it up the next day. Cliffhangers ruin 'safe' stop points.

Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

10/1/2019, 5:52:09 AM
Personally, I don't mind cliffhangers between chapters. They are annoying, especially if NOTHING open was resolved in the the chapter and you are just adding another cliff, but cliffhangers between books...

Those are NOT the same thing. For series, you have the sustained, underlying series conflict (ex: Batman' attempt to ultimately eradicate crime in Gotham), but each book in a series has its own 'primary conflict'. The cliffhangers at the end of books comes when the characters resolves the primary conflict of that book (ex: arresting the Riddler), before introducing the primary conflict of the next book (ex: the Joker starts causing trouble to). But ultimately, the underlying conflict (eliminating Gotham's crime), continues unabated (until Batman eventually comprehends that he's the problem, as his fame is motivating the continual rise of Supervillians, and he fades into the background, quietly fighting crime without the attention grabbing costume).

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Vincent Berg

What you quote is from karactr, not me. I very much do mind cliffhangers.

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

What you quote is from karactr, not me. I very much do mind cliffhangers

Sorry, that happens from time to time. :(

upper ๐Ÿšซ

@Redsliver

Dramatic tension creates stress in the reader. That stress can be resolved in a two ways -- by reading the resolution, or by ceasing to care about the characters. Until it is resolved, the reader carries it and feels stressed.

When the resolution is available and the reader reads it immediately, the stress is brief and isn't a problem. In fact, I believe that part of why we read is to induce the stress-and-release pattern. But when the
next chapter hasn't been posted yet, it isn't possible for to continue reading. We can either carry that stress, or stop caring about your characters.

Please -- motivate us to keep reading with characters we care about. Don't just dump a load of stress on us and tell us to carry it for a week or a month!

Uther_Pendragon ๐Ÿšซ

@upper

I am currently posting a story with a chapter break when the hero carries the heroine into the bedroom.

There isn't all that much uncertainty about what is going to happen in the bedroom, but would you list that as abusing the reader?

Replies:   joyR
joyR ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Uther_Pendragon

Well, you said "into the bedroom", so it depends, whose bedroom? Is the reader confident that your hero and heroine are about to make little heroes and heroettes? Or is it the bedroom of the protagonist, waiting with henchmen poised to ravage the heroine and rape the hero?

Abuse is in the context, or in this case, the wrong choice of bedroom...

Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@upper

Please -- motivate us to keep reading with characters we care about. Don't just dump a load of stress on us and tell us to carry it for a week or a month!

First, if the reader doesn't care about the characters there is no stress. Why would there be stress if they don't care what happens to them? And if they don't care about the characters, that is very bad.

If the characters are going about without conflict there is no reason to read the story. It's the conflict that keeps the reader reading. Rooting for the protagonist and against the antagonist. Worrying about the hero. But only if the reader cares about him.

I think the adversity to cliffhangers here is due to the nature of posting chapters instead of a complete story. With a complete story, the reader has the option of going to the next chapter or not to find out what happens. I once read a quote that an author's job is to keep the reader up late at night so they have a hard time getting up the next morning to go to work (or something like that). Basically, the reader can't put the book down.

Cliffhangers originated for the exact reason you're talking about. To make the person urgently wait for the next installment (magazine issue, soap opera episode, etc.). But good literature uses it to create stress (for the character) and the reader if he cares about the character. To keep the reader turning pages.

Redsliver ๐Ÿšซ

@upper

If I'm not writing characters you care about, you are going to stop reading, cliffhangers are no. Every scene needs to end with a change to the characters, often with a problem or danger that needs resolution. Every chapter ends at the end of a scene. Cliffhangers, of varying tension, are going to come up with every chapter.

I don't go out of my way to create overly stressful cliffhangers, but if you like my characters and they're worth your time and the story isn't fully up, there's going to be some tension you need to carry until next update.

awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@Redsliver

That's your style, but it doesn't mean everyone has to write that way.

You could, for example, structure your story like many TV drama series - each episode (chapter) has its own conflict and resolution, but there's an overarching story arc, containing the major conflict of the series, that progresses with each episode.

AJ

Replies:   Redsliver
Redsliver ๐Ÿšซ

@awnlee jawking

Yeah, that's how the Spider-Man fanfics I have up read out. Also how I planned to write Small Town Goddesses. But those aren't three to four thousand bite sized chunks, they're 20 000 word short stories.

I haven't figured out how to write a complete story in that small size.

@Switch Blayde

True. One chapter doesn't mean one scene. Two, three, four, or five, if the POV, conflict, or setting changes. I just prefer to end a chapter with a scene break.

The goal is to make every scene matter. The characters have to come out of the scene paying some cost or achieving some reward or the scene was just filler.

I don't think I always live up to my standards.

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ

@Redsliver

The characters have to come out of the scene paying some cost or achieving some reward or the scene was just filler.

Not necessarily. Sometimes the purpose of the scene is pacing.

Let's say you have a fast-paced scene where the hero escapes from those trying to kill him. The next scene might be slow-paced with him recollecting what was happening or planning his next move. It gives the reader a time to catch their breath.

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

If it's Dr Who, it may be the third scene of four of the episode, in which no action happens but the actors do their gurning as they pretend to be sad or frightened.

AJ

Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ

@Redsliver

Every chapter ends at the end of a scene.

Unless the POV character changes in the middle of a scene. Often you have a scene break within the chapter, but you can start a new chapter.

Ernest Bywater ๐Ÿšซ

@tendres

Any thoughts?

After I hit the third cliffhanger in a row I stop reading and put the author on my 'I wish he could write properly list' then never read them again.

Yes, cliffhangers work for weekly newspaper publications and weekly theater films, but you have to realize that over time the great majority of your readers will be reading the finished work as one complete work and the constant cliffhangers are annoying as hell. They also imply you think your work isn't good enough to stand on it's own merits.

oldegrump ๐Ÿšซ

I agree with Ernest, I do not usually read any incomplete story. If your chapters need a cliffhanger to keep the serial readers, then there may be something missing that will not make the transition to the next chapter either smooth or strong enough to create interest to continue.

I know I only write short stories, and I do that because my storyline wanders if I go too much past 25 or 30 pages.

Rather than a cliffhanger, just hints at something Germaine to the story that will draw your readers in.

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@oldegrump

10/1/2019, 12:58:43 AM
I agree with Ernest, I do not usually read any incomplete story. If your chapters need a cliffhanger to keep the serial readers, then there may be something missing that will not make the transition to the next chapter either smooth or strong enough to create interest to continue.

The problem with multiple cliffhangers, is that it indicates the author has no clue how to maintain an ongoing conflict (i.e. there so busy worrying about the next chapter, they're unable to sustain multi-chapter conflicts. And monthly serials have which relied on sustained cliffhangers have never worked for long, as readers eventually get bored, and stop buying them. Quite simply, it's unsustainable.

But as Ernest points out, the worst thing about them is that they reveal the author's lack of confidence in his own writing, which will sink an authors work faster than anything else. It's why no one votes for political candidates who continually say "um ..." as it indicates a lack of conviction.

A better approach, is to concentrate on conflicts. You have sustained conflicts, and story and series conflicts, while also supporting multiple sub-plot conflicts. However, you need to resolve each mini-conflict to provide for reader satisfaction. If NOTHING is ever resolved, then WHY would anyone continue reading. Sustained conflict means you nurse and build the underlying conflict, which takes effort. So rather than a story which rapidly accelerates, only to pause, before rapidly accelerating towards an all new conflict, you vary pacing over the course of the story. Some chapters race by, while others are more detailed and introspective. This adds depth to otherwise simplistic stories.

Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ

@Vincent Berg

And monthly serials have which relied on sustained cliffhangers have never worked for long, as readers eventually get bored, and stop buying them. Quite simply, it's unsustainable.

If that were true, people would stop watching TV soap operas and other TV series. They seem to end with a cliffhanger a lot. And the season ending one always ends with a cliffhanger (which is a bitch when the show is cancelled).

Replies:   joyR  Vincent Berg
joyR ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

They seem to end with a cliffhanger a lot.

Even those damn TV game shows go to commercials just before a winner is announced.

Not going to even start on the stupid craze for long pregnant pauses when announcing a winner of just about anything on TV...

Quote of the day

"I'm a pacifist, I enjoy peace and quiet, so I believe a .50 Barrett is a valid response to uninvited callers, and a mini gun appropriate for use on idiot drivers."

Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

If that were true, people would stop watching TV soap operas and other TV series. They seem to end with a cliffhanger a lot. And the season ending one always ends with a cliffhanger (which is a bitch when the show is cancelled).

Ah, but the soap operas resolve it the next day, or Monday at the latest (Tuesday's if it's a holiday), while a season's ending is like introducing the theme/conflict of the next book in a series. It's not so much another cliffhanger as introducing the primary conflicts of the following season.

But, a never resolved season's cliffhanger is much less frustrating than the ever-maddening 'It was all a dream' when the writers realize they've lost touch with both the characters and viewers (and management too)!

Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Vincent Berg

It's why no one votes for political candidates who continually say "um ..." as it indicates a lack of conviction.

No political candidate in the entire history of humanity has ever had real conviction, though most can fake it convincingly enough to get elected.

To me, the use of "um" in speech is an indicator of confusion, not a lack of conviction.

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

To me, the use of "um" in speech is an indicator of confusion, not a lack of conviction.

That's the standard assumption, but actual studies of word usages indicate it's actually a temporary stalling tactic, used by a wide variety of tactic, to organize the rest of their sentence or the next. Thus few of us, in normal conversations, even notice it. But when someone is on camera, and you can review it in detail multiple times, those temporary pauses are deadly. :(

richardshagrin ๐Ÿšซ

The Bobbsy Twins my mom read to us when were 5 or 6 or 7 had a cliffhanger at the end of every chapter. We never wanted to go to bed at the end of a chapter reading. Mom figured out the problem and quit reading in the middle of the chapters. No cliffhanger, no problem. We were happy to go to bed when she quit reading. You might enjoy the story more if you only read from the middle of the last chapter to the middle of the current one. No cliffhanger so no problem.

Replies:   Redsliver
Redsliver ๐Ÿšซ

@richardshagrin

The Bobbsy Twins my mom read to us when were 5 or 6 or 7 had a cliffhanger at the end of every chapter. We never wanted to go to bed at the end of a chapter reading.

Richard's got it in one. Cliffhangers, cliffhangers, cliffhangers. I'm being a bit more gungho than I honestly am, however, your main job as a writer is to manipulate your readers and puppeteer them into coming back for more.

First and foremost, write the way you're comfortable and good at writing. If people are complaining about it being too cliffhangery, that's a problem for them. Maybe you want to change it to improve their reading experience, maybe you don't. Just remember, people are good at knowing when something's wrong, and they're garbage at telling you how to fix it.

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@Redsliver

Just remember, people are good at knowing when something's wrong, and they're garbage at telling you how to fix it.

Excellent point, but it reinforces the notion that the author has a sustained problem with his current writing style.

Replies:   Redsliver
Redsliver ๐Ÿšซ

@Vincent Berg

Excellent point, but it reinforces the notion that the author has a sustained problem with his current writing style.

True, it's why I added my second post after my first initial pithy one. I really wasn't helping with the first one I posted.

tendres ๐Ÿšซ

I might try moving the chapter boundaries so they don't happen at the end of a chapter.

karactr ๐Ÿšซ

Personally, I don't mind cliffhangers between chapters. They are annoying, especially if NOTHING open was resolved in the the chapter and you are just adding another cliff, but cliffhangers between books...

You are just trying to garner interest in the sequel. I find that too manipulative and have quit reading series because of it.

Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@tendres

Depends on what you mean by a hook.

What I consider to be a cliff hanger, is to start a scene involving major conflict and dropping in a chapter break with the fate of the main characters unresolved.

As a reader, this is something I hate, especially when it's done at the end of every chapter. If you start a scene in a chapter, that scene should be complete at the end of the chapter.

Unless the story was otherwise compelling, I would stop reading a story over deliberate cliffhangers.

Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

If you start a scene in a chapter, that scene should be complete at the end of the chapter.

One situation where that's not true is if the POV character changes in the middle of the scene (in 3rd-person limited). You can put in a scene break or start a new chapter.

You guys should read bestselling thrillers. Sometimes they leave a cliffhanger at the end of a chapter and the next chapter doesn't resolve it. Something else happens in the next chapter with different characters and then a later chapter goes back to that cliffhanger.

Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

You guys should read bestselling thrillers. Sometimes they leave a cliffhanger at the end of a chapter and the next chapter doesn't resolve it. Something else happens in the next chapter with different characters and then a later chapter goes back to that cliffhanger.

That makes sense, as it draws out the tension and heightens the suspense, while keeping the readers guessing about what's ultimately going to happen.

I'd try it, but my readers might scalp me (mixing genres a bit).

Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

You guys should read bestselling thrillers. Sometimes they leave a cliffhanger at the end of a chapter and the next chapter doesn't resolve it.

That sort of thing is part of why I don't read thrillers.

Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

One situation where that's not true is if the POV character changes in the middle of the scene (in 3rd-person limited). You can put in a scene break or start a new chapter.

Personally, I consider those two separate scenes entirely. And a chapter break should not be used if it swaps POV with the fate of major characters hanging in the balance.

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

Personally, I consider those two separate scenes entirely. And a chapter break should not be used if it swaps POV with the fate of major characters hanging in the balance.

Ok, here's the end of a chapter in my first novel. Jeff and Elizabeth are in a porn theater. Jeff is blackmailing her and told her to suck his dick. The chapter from Jeff's POV ends with:

Elizabeth glanced at Jeff's face and then shifted in her seat toward him. One trembling hand fumbled with his belt and slid the leather strap through the pants loop. Then, with an injured kitten whimper, she yanked the belt free of the hook. She took a deep breath and released the air. She leaned forward and unsnapped his jeans using both hands, but then leaned back.

It was Jeff's turn to hold his breath. She had changed her mind. Now what? He would never rape her. He doubted he would even go through with the threat. It was one thing to destroy Pastor Hathaway, but Elizabeth had never hurt him.

That's how the chapter ends. Cliffhanger? Sure. The next chapter switches to Elizabeth's POV:

Elizabeth glowered in the dark theater. Determined not to look at Jeff's face, her eyes remained on his lap. A deep, drawn out sigh raised and lowered her shoulders before she leaned over the armrest to reach for his zipper. After picking at the shiny metal tab with her fingernail, attempting to touch nothing else, she pinched the cool metal between her thumb and forefinger and tugged it down.

The intake of air from Jeff caused Elizabeth to hesitate, but not look up. Her eyes darted from side to side as she sought a way out. She could beg. No! She had tried that. He was not a compassionate man like her husband. She had never met anyone like him. He was evil. A monster. He would show the photos, she was sure of that. Why had she been so stupid? This was her penance to atone for her sins.

Elizabeth folded open the top of Jeff's jeans. Her brow creased at the sight of his bright blue underwear. They were so different from Milford's white, baggy ones which she washed and folded on laundry day.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

That's how the chapter ends. Cliffhanger?

Not to me. I take a fairly narrow view of what is a cliffhanger based on the origin of the term. A character or character will live or die based on what happens in the next few minutes.

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Dominions Son

Not to me. I take a fairly narrow view of what is a cliffhanger based on the origin of the term. A character or character will live or die based on what happens in the next few minutes.

Google's definition: "an ending to an episode of a serial drama that leaves the audience in suspense." Change "episode" to "chapter" and you're leaving the reader in suspense. In my example, would she do it? And what does Jeff do if she doesn't?

Wikipedia's definition: "a plot device in fiction which features a main character in a precarious or difficult dilemma, or confronted with a shocking revelation at the end of an episode[1] of serialized fiction. A cliffhanger is hoped to incentivize the audience to return to see how the characters resolve the dilemma."

Leaving the reader in suspense. Having the character face a dilemma. The dilemma doesn't have to be life or death.

BlacKnight ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

You guys should read bestselling thrillers. Sometimes they leave a cliffhanger at the end of a chapter and the next chapter doesn't resolve it. Something else happens in the next chapter with different characters and then a later chapter goes back to that cliffhanger.

I think I've mentioned it here before, but the most egregious example I've ever seen of that was in a Dan Brown book. The female protagonist boards a helicopter that's to take her to a meeting with the President, and the chapter ends with an ominous, "... but the helicopter would never reach the White House."

Then it switches to the other protagonist for a while.

When we finally get back to her, it turns out that the reason that our heroine's helicopter is never going to reach the White House is simply because her meeting with the President is somewhere else, and so the helicopter is not and was never taking her to the White House, she was never in any particular danger, and the cliffhanger was completely manufactured out of nothing.

Replies:   joyR
joyR ๐Ÿšซ

@BlacKnight

in a Dan Brown book

Conjures an image of him with crayons and a colouring book. (The only type he should be allowed) and he STILL could not keep between the lines...

AmigaClone ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

Depends on what you mean by a hook.

I see a hook as something like "they were interrupted by a knock on the door."

When the story is being posted with some regularity (with a short time span between new posts) then that type of thing is not bad.

On the other hand, I don't like stories where the author seems to enjoy putting the life of a major character in danger at the end of every post, then months or years past before an update...

Tefler ๐Ÿšซ

@tendres

My readers often groan at me for ending a chapter that way, but I've only ended one chapter with a proper cliffhanger. The term came from the silver screen, where the hero would end up dangling from a cliff and you had to wait until the next episode to find out if he survived.

I normally try to keep each chapter to 30k words, so I just stop at a convenient point when I finish the final scene. For example, the cast plan and prepare for a battle, then I end it there before launching into the mission itself. That isn't a cliffhanger, but it does leave the reader excited to find out what happens next.

A proper cliffhanger leaves the cast in real jeopardy, basically ending the chapter right in the middle of the action. In chapter 120 of Three Square Meals, I had the bad guys cut the protagonist's ship in half, capture the hero, and leave a big question mark over the fate of all the other main cast members.

In my opinion the former is fine, as it keeps the readership engaged and interested to see what happens next. The latter use very sparingly, because you're leaving the reader desperate to know if their favourite characters are dead or alive!

samuelmichaels ๐Ÿšซ

@Tefler

In my opinion the former is fine, as it keeps the readership engaged and interested to see what happens next. The latter use very sparingly, because you're leaving the reader desperate to know if their favourite characters are dead or alive!

Fully agree!

Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@Tefler

My readers often groan at me for ending a chapter that way, but I've only ended one chapter with a proper cliffhanger. The term came from the silver screen, where the hero would end up dangling from a cliff and you had to wait until the next episode to find out if he survived.

I normally try to keep each chapter to 30k words, so I just stop at a convenient point when I finish the final scene. For example, the cast plan and prepare for a battle, then I end it there before launching into the mission itself. That isn't a cliffhanger, but it does leave the reader excited to find out what happens next.

Again, the typical approach is to switch to 'episodic' chapters, where each chapter focuses on a specific event. Once that event is over (either a new girl, a fight, or a new town), the chapter ends as the mini-conflict is resolved (he decides he's not into the new girl, he survives the fight, or he finishes his business in that particular city). Authors fall into the cliffhanger trap, when they have difficulties figuring out where the next chapter is going, and makes it up on the fly. Again, it's typically a symptom of a lack of advance planning.

Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Tefler

In chapter 120 of Three Square Meals, I had the bad guys cut the protagonist's ship in half, capture the hero, and leave a big question mark over the fate of all the other main cast members.

Personally I don't really consider that much of a cliffhanger.

John was unconscious and in the hands of the enemy, but if the enemy was going to kill him immediately, he wouldn't have taken him alive in the first place. The only one's who's short term (next 30 minutes to an hour) survival was in serious jeopardy were Fay and the nymphs.

awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

Many successful dead tree authors end some chapters on cliffhangers - James Patterson and David Baldacci for example. Personally I'm not a fan - I prefer chapters to end at quiet points - but so many authors do it and make a lot of money from their readers that claims it's a weakness reek of elitism.

AJ

Ernest Bywater ๐Ÿšซ

@awnlee jawking

Many successful dead tree authors end some chapters on cliffhangers - James Patterson and David Baldacci for example. Personally I'm not a fan - I prefer chapters to end at quiet points - but so many authors do it and make a lot of money from their readers that claims it's a weakness reek of elitism.

AJ,

James Patterson and most other modern top story list authors are more a low level writing marketing system than anything else. Just remember these people appear on the same lists as stories like Lovely Bones etc.

As to examples of good authors, with the exceptions of those who wrote serials for newspapers and magazines, there are ten or more good authors who don't use cliffhangers than there are ones who do. Look at Heinlein, Asimov, Niven, Wells, Verne, Bradbury, Clarke, and every other classic or longstanding author.

Like you I prefer chapters with quiet end points as the action scenes in a chapter should finish within the chapter. The plot may carry through to later chapters, but the individual scenes should be finished within the chapter they occur. If the only way to keep people's interest is a cliffhanger then the rest of the story can't offer much of interest. While there are a few stories that are enthralling that have some cliffhangers, they are few and far between and they don't have a cliffhanger at the end of every chapter.

However, people have different tastes and some like the cliffhangers.

Ernest

awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@Ernest Bywater

To me that comes across as elitism. A good author is someone would makes their readers want to read more.

We'll have to agree to disagree.

(IIRC, Asimov and Wells used cliffhangers in some stories, although not at the end of every chapter.)

AJ

Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@Ernest Bywater

However, people have different tastes and some like the cliffhangers.

Cliffhangers work, but quickly become tiring if overused. Some are adept at keeping them fresh, but for most of us, it's best to use them judiciously, so they'll be effective when we most need them.

Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ

@Ernest Bywater

James Patterson and most other modern top story list authors are more a low level writing marketing system than anything else

Would you put Shakespeare in the category of low level writing?

William Shakespeare could not afford for his audience to be bored, and for this reason he uses a cliffhanger in Act 1, Scene 1 of his play The Tempest. The scene of a storm and shipwreck is depicted in a most vivid manner, but the audience is unsure if anybody on the ship has survived. The device is employed with the purpose that the audience will return to see the next act. Finally, the fate of the crew on board is revealed in Act 2, Scene 1 and the focus of the audience is ensured by that time.

Charles Dickens and Thomas Hardy used cliffhangers as well, although they were writing serials in magazines so maybe it doesn't count.

The term "cliffhanger" seems to get its name from the Thomas Hardy's novel A Pair of Blue Eyes, which was published in a magazine in a series format, with a chapter published every month. At the end of one of the episodes, Hardy left his main character, Henry Knight, hanging onto a cliff, staring at the stony eyes of a fossil embedded in rocks below. Since then, every abrupt end has been termed a "cliffhanger."

Let's go back further.

Cliffhanger has its roots in ancient oriental literature. One example is in the collection of stories known as One Thousand and One Nights, in which the king Shehreyar orders his queen Scheherzade to be hanged. She devises a plan to tell a story to the king every night, ending that story with a cliffhanger. The king postponed the order of execution every day to hear the rest of the story.

Of course overuse of any literary device is bad writing. But cliffhangers are valid literary devices.

By nature, man is a curious creature. Cliffhangers in any form of literature appeal to our curiosity. The main purpose of employing this device is to maintain suspense in the plot in order to ensure the interest and focus of the readers. It acts as bait to lead the readers from one part of the text to another with more interest than before.

Cliffhangers, undoubtedly, are enjoyable to read at the end of the chapters of novels. However, it can be very frustrating at the very end of a novel, as it leaves readers discontented after all the effort they put in to read the novel.

Replies:   Ernest Bywater  REP
Ernest Bywater ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

Would you put Shakespeare in the category of low level writing?

Yes.

Charles Dickens and Thomas Hardy used cliffhangers as well, although they were writing serials in magazines so maybe it doesn't count.

Correct.

Of course overuse of any literary device is bad writing. But cliffhangers are valid literary devices.

So is a Deus ex machina - but to use it is seen as poor writing and inartistic.

Replies:   BarBar  joyR
BarBar ๐Ÿšซ

@Ernest Bywater

So is a Deus ex machina - but to use it is seen as poor writing and inartistic.

I agree that Deus ex machina is poor writing but cliffhangers are not in the same class.

I like occasional cliffhangers in things that I read, watch on TV and write. I agree with earlier comments that using them all the time is poor technique but it is a stretch to go from there to suggesting that any use of cliffhangers is bad.

An occasional, well-placed cliffhanger can be very good and some excellent writers have used them to good effect.

I do dislike cliffhangers in a series if the next installment is not either immediately available or is not reasonably expected within a short time frame.

joyR ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Ernest Bywater

So is a Deus ex machina - but to use it is seen as poor writing and inartistic.

Ok, devils advocate time.

Deus ex machina comes from the greek theos ek mฤ“khanฤ“s literally a god from a machine, which refers to the practise of suspending a 'god' from a crane who acted to provide an, often surprise, ending to a play. It dates back to the 5th century.

So, whilst the modern meaning has changed, it is not rather egotistical to hold it up as either 'poor writing' or 'inartistic' ? After all, there are greek writers and artists whose work is still recognised today.

Anyone who produces an art form that survives twenty-six centuries ought not to be charged with being a poor writer or inartistic.

Edited to add the missing ten centuries. (Found by Michael Loucks)

Replies:   Michael Loucks
Michael Loucks ๐Ÿšซ

@joyR

It dates back to the 5th century.

[snip]

Anyone who produces an art form that survives sixteen centuries ought not to be charged with being a poor writer or inartistic.

5th BC, right? So 25 or 26 centuries?

Replies:   joyR
joyR ๐Ÿšซ

@Michael Loucks

5th BC, right?

You ever have a blonde moment...? Yup, me too.

Thanks for spotting it. :)

REP ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Switch Blayde

although they were writing serials in magazines so maybe it doesn't count.

Why wouldn't it count? The medium (e.g. film, book, or magazine) in which a cliffhanger is used should have nothing to do with the break in presentation for suspense being a cliffhanger.

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ

@REP

although they were writing serials in magazines so maybe it doesn't count.

Why wouldn't it count? The medium (e.g. film, book, or magazine) in which a cliffhanger is used should have nothing to do with the break in presentation for suspense being a cliffhanger.

When I googled cliffhanger, it was hard to even find it referenced in novels. It was all about screen and magazines. And the Dickens and Hardy examples were serials in magazines/newspapers to get people to buy the next issue.

With a novel, the reader already bought it so the motive is different. It's to keep the reader's interest. For him to keep reading. When it's at the end of the novel it's to get him to buy the next novel.

Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@awnlee jawking

Personally I'm not a fan - I prefer chapters to end at quiet points - but so many authors do it and make a lot of money from their readers that claims it's a weakness reek of elitism.

As with most guidelines, it's not written in stone, it's just difficult to pull off successfully, and is best left to those with a knack for it. As for the game shows, the key is keeping the technique fresh by continually changing it up, so it doesn't become stale.

When it no longer works, everyone loses their jobs!

joyR ๐Ÿšซ

Is there really any point in treating chapters in a published book in the same way as chapters posted one at a time online..?

Once the posted story is complete, it can of course be read without pause just like a published book, but in the case of an online author who may post less frequently, a hook may well keep reads hungry enough to look out for the next posted chapter. (Not hard on SoL, but other sites are not so well designed)

Similarly, comparing a classic (dead) author with a current best selling author without allowing for the changes in readership tastes etc isn't always going to produce a worthwhile comparison.

At the time some classic writers books were published the best selling books were 'penny dreadfuls'. So whilst now their works are considered classics, at the time they were often not widely recognised.

Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@joyR

Once the posted story is complete, it can of course be read without pause just like a published book, but in the case of an online author who may post less frequently, a hook may well keep reads hungry enough to look out for the next posted chapter.

'Crept when life intervenes, and your regular posting schedule goes to hell. Then, readers get so frustrated, they'll abandon your work long before it gets yellow tagged.

Replies:   joyR
joyR ๐Ÿšซ

@Vincent Berg

'Crept when life intervenes, and your regular posting schedule goes to hell. Then, readers get so frustrated, they'll abandon your work long before it gets yellow tagged.

True. But nothing at all to do with a cliffhanger ending.

Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@joyR

Once the posted story is complete, it can of course be read without pause just like a published book

Except if it's long enough to be difficult to read in one sitting, chapter breaks are convenient stopping points.

but in the case of an online author who may post less frequently, a hook may well keep reads hungry enough to look out for the next posted chapter.

There are other hooks to use besides cliffhangers.

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

There are other hooks to use besides cliffhangers.

One such hook is to give the secondary protagonists conflicting agendas. Then, during any slower sections, the verbal sparing between the various good guys help keep the tension going even during the slower sections, and the technique helps to develop the secondary characters more than you would normally.

However, it typically takes a lot of extra work setting up those types of stories. :( (I've only used it a couple of times.) Yes-men are easy to write.

helmut_meukel ๐Ÿšซ

@joyR

Is there really any point in treating chapters in a published book in the same way as chapters posted one at a time online..?

Yes.
First, shouldn't a book completed before posting treated same as a 'published book'?
Second, why should we distinguish between completed books posted all chapters together and those posted one chapter every other day?

Thus remains the books that the author started posting when s/he was only a few โ€“ if any โ€“ chapters ahead in writing.

Some will finally end and so becoming real books and we should tread the completed book like the other books.

Then there are some going on for years and can go on for quite some more decades as long as the author is willing and able tho write new chapters. (The number of readers may dwindle away but that's irrelevant).
This group of stories you really can't compare with 'published books'.

BTW, question to you authors: how many downloads before the story is complete and after completion? (in relation to the time-span?)

HM.

Replies:   joyR  Vincent Berg  joyR
joyR ๐Ÿšซ

@helmut_meukel

Yes.
First, shouldn't a book completed before posting treated same as a 'published book'?
Second, why should we distinguish between completed books posted all chapters together and those posted one chapter every other day?

Huh...?? Are you missing the point, or choosing to aim elsewhere..?

Then there are some going on for years and can go on for quite some more decades as long as the author is willing and able tho write new chapters. (The number of readers may dwindle away but that's irrelevant).
This group of stories you really can't compare with 'published books'.

Which is what I stated.

Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@helmut_meukel

First, shouldn't a book completed before posting treated same as a 'published book'?
Second, why should we distinguish between completed books posted all chapters together and those posted one chapter every other day?

Because, generally, they're written differently. Those completed beforehand are generally revised to ensure the story's consistency, and one tends to remove things like summary's and unnecessary cliffhangers, as well as eliminating an unsuccessful side plots.

Replies:   helmut_meukel
helmut_meukel ๐Ÿšซ

@Vincent Berg

I wrote:

Second, why should we distinguish between completed books posted all chapters together and those posted one chapter every other day?

and you answered:

Because, generally, they're written differently. Those completed beforehand are generally revised to ensure the story's consistency, [...]

Yes, but re-read what I wrote, I asked about already completed stories and why distinguish between the posting modes (all chapters together vs. drawn out over days or weeks).

HM.

joyR ๐Ÿšซ

@helmut_meukel

Second, why should we distinguish between completed books posted all chapters together and those posted one chapter every other day?

Firstly, where did the 'every other day' come from? Occasionally an author will post chapters daily, but the vast majority post weekly, a lot post weakly.

The point isn't about reading a completed story, because for posted stories here on SoL or wherever, the author is often, perhaps usually, more interested at the time of posting that long after. Similarly readers following a new story want to see new chapters NOW..!! or at least often and on a regular schedule. But that isn't always the case.

There are many examples of well known authors who have posted chapters weeks, months, even years apart. So. Comparing them with published books is utterly pointless.

Why would you try to compare a kipper to a kangaroo...?

helmut_meukel ๐Ÿšซ

@joyR

Firstly, where did the 'every other day' come from?

Just within the last few weeks I read in an author's blog he has completed his new story and will post its chapters every other day.

HM.

Replies:   joyR
joyR ๐Ÿšซ

@helmut_meukel

Just within the last few weeks I read in an author's blog he has completed his new story and will post its chapters every other day.

If you wish to base your position on a single story posted amongst all those uploaded in a two week period, go right ahead.

helmut_meukel ๐Ÿšซ

@joyR

Why would you try to compare a kipper to a kangaroo...?

Because they both start with a 'k' and I wouldn't eat either one?

HM.

Ernest Bywater ๐Ÿšซ

@joyR

Firstly, where did the 'every other day' come from?

Years ago I found out if you post a story with a new chapter every other day it has the story showing on the Home page almost all of the time you're posting the story and it means it's up for longer than posting the story every day or in one go. I complete the story before I start posting, so it's easy to set up such a schedule. When I post a new story I mention the schedule in my blog, and I've notice some other authors who complete the story first have also picked up using the every other day schedule.

Replies:   joyR
joyR ๐Ÿšซ

@Ernest Bywater

if you post a story with a new chapter every other day it has the story showing on the Home page almost all of the time you're posting the story

I'm not disputing the concept as it works for you and others. I simply wondered where the 'every other day' came from in the context of the discussion. In the bell curve of times between posted chapters it certainly isn't (yet) the median, or even close.

Replies:   Ernest Bywater
Ernest Bywater ๐Ÿšซ

@joyR

In the bell curve of times between posted chapters it certainly isn't (yet) the median, or even close.

That's because the majority of people post their stories as either a single posting if completed, or they post each chapter as they write it. There are very few of us who post completed stories a chapter at a time over a period.

Banadin ๐Ÿšซ

I love the cliffhangers where the hero is left in dire straits and the opening of the next chapter is, "After freeing himself from the danger he proceeded to" I remember radio shows doing that.

awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

One of the best ongoing serials on World Literature IMO is 'Star Guardian 2' by Duncan7 on scifistories.com. I'v just read the latest update and the chapter ends on a minor cliffhanger. However, for a story this good (it gets my maximum 3 stars rating), I'll forgive the author ;)

AJ

tendres ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

If there is no mortal danger to the main characters, is it just a foreshadowing of something interesting up ahead in the story? Most likely the interesting thing is in the next chapter.

Replies:   Redsliver  Vincent Berg
Redsliver ๐Ÿšซ

@tendres

If there is no mortal danger to the main characters, is it just a foreshadowing of something interesting up ahead in the story? Most likely the interesting thing is in the next chapter.

That sounds like a hook. I don't think a cliffhanger has to be dire life and death and I do think every chapter needs to lead to something to come. Sometimes that's just adding a variable, revealing a problem, putting up a clock, or amplifying a plot point.

I think your example is a good way to tease and lead your readers to the next chapter.

Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@tendres

If there is no mortal danger to the main characters, is it just a foreshadowing of something interesting up ahead in the story? Most likely the interesting thing is in the next chapter.

A sudden switch of sides, or a character violating their morals, is a plot twist, not a cliffhanger, and generally, they're best served in the middle of the chapter, where they can be more fully explored than rushing for an unsatisfactory chapter ending surprise.

Jason Samson ๐Ÿšซ

I post a full story and I get at most a dozen messages/comments.

I post the same already-finished story episodically, and I get dozens of comments and dozens of messages.

I post the story with the chapters ending on minor cliffhangers and it approaches hundreds of comments and hundreds of messages.

As soon as the story is finished, comments and feedback drop to basically zero. And the scores dip.

I have been experimenting. That's what I've found. If you write stories for the feedback, post it as short chapters with small cliffhangers.

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg ๐Ÿšซ

@Jason Samson

I have been experimenting. That's what I've found. If you write stories for the feedback, post it as short chapters with small cliffhangers.

I prefer plot-based pacing, rather than writing for the end of each chapter. I write towards the end of the book, so everything in the book moves the story to it's conclusion, but when you put that much emphasis on each individual chapter, then no chapter really stands out.

Just my opinion. Take it for what you will.

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ

@Vincent Berg

I write towards the end of the book

One of the changes I made to my first novel when I brought it up to my current standard was to change "towards" to "toward," "backwards" to "backward," etc because of what I've read. The following is from Grammarly:

Toward vs. Towards

The only difference between toward and towards is the s. Both spellings are correct, and they mean the same thing: in the direction of.

Toward is the preferred spelling in the United States and Canada. In other English-speaking countries, such as the United Kingdom and Australia, towards is the more common spelling. The Chicago Manual of Style notices this difference; The AP Stylebook recommends using the shorter spelling.

Both spellings of the word can be traced all the way back to Old English. Toward, as we know it now, evolved from toweard, which meant "in the direction of." Toweards was the Old English adverb derived from toweard by adding the adverbial genitive s.

I've been observing posts here (like what I quoted here), on wattpad, and other places. Everyone seems to use "towards" with the "s". Is Grammarly and everyone else wrong? It seems everyone uses it with the "s" even U.S. and Canada people. It's also my first inclination (at least it was before I read about the difference).

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

It seems everyone uses it with the "s" even U.S. and Canada people.

Born and raised in the Upper Midwest (Wisconsin). We use both. Same with backward/backwards.

As a general use, with the s when denoting movement, without if noting which way a relatively stationary person is facing/looking.

Wheezer ๐Ÿšซ

I just finished a long novel (e-book) that ended on a horrible cliffhanger with the protagonist being arrested when he was just a few steps from freedom. The author plans more books in the series, but they are a year or two away from publishing. I paid $10.00 for this punishment! That's what I get for being a loyal reader of this author. :(

Replies:   joyR  Switch Blayde
joyR ๐Ÿšซ

@Wheezer

That's what I get for being a loyal reader of this author.

Since you stated you have just finished reading this long novel, you presumably enjoyed the story and were entertained. Was that worth your $10 ?? Are you still a loyal reader or an ex loyal reader? What price loyalty? Is it void just because of an ending you dislike, despite enjoying the long story..??

Since the ending is the same regardless of the loyalty of the reader, you cannot really claim, "that's what I get for being a loyal reader of this author."

$0.02

Replies:   Wheezer
Wheezer ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@joyR

Since the ending is the same regardless of the loyalty of the reader, you cannot really claim, "that's what I get for being a loyal reader of this author."

I sometimes forget that humorous intent, sarcasm, and many other things that are perfectly clear in face to face real life interactions are often lost in plain text communication. Yes, I'm aggravated at the ending, but I'll wait for the next in series. This book is #6 in the series and the first to end with a cliffhanger.

Replies:   graybyrd
graybyrd ๐Ÿšซ

@Wheezer

I'm a big fan of drama on PBS. I watched an entire first season of a historical series featuring a commanding male lead, and got very caught up in the unfolding situation involving him, the family, the conflict -- the entire dramatic situation.

At the conclusion of the season's final episode, the protagonist was arrested, hauled away in manacles and chains, and tossed into a prison from which survival was uncertain.

I felt totally betrayed, having to wait a half-year to 1) see if the series would be renewed, and 2) trying to reestablish continuity (and credulity!) with the storyline. That plot ploy destroyed my interest in the series. Although the (very popular) series continued on for another few seasons I never watched another episode.

I have the same reaction when a book in a series uses the same cheap device. It goes on the rubbish heap.

Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ

@Wheezer

the protagonist being arrested when he was just a few steps from freedom. The author plans more books in the series

I read a James Patterson novel this summer like that. I didn't know it was a series and jumped in in the middle of the series. That was okay, but it ended with the protagonist (a lady cop) going into prison. I'm sure there'll be another one that starts there.

But it's not a cliffhanger. She killed the bad guy and then was taken to prison for the laws she broke doing that. What happens after that is a different story.

BlacKnight ๐Ÿšซ

I just searched my current WIP for "-ward(s)" words, and discovered that whether I add the 's' or not depends on the word.

"Towards" always has an 's'. "Forward" and "northward", "eastward", and the like never have an 's'. "Backwards", "upwards", and "downwards" usually have an 's', but may not depending on something that I'm not entirely clear about when consciously analyzing it. I found one paragraph where I have "upward thrust" and "upwards movement" in consecutive sentences.

But the really weird thing I turned up: Apparently I have one character who says "toward". Every single use in the 150k+-word novel is "towards", except in this one character's dialogue, where it's always "toward". I didn't do this consciously.

My MC and 1st-person narrator's regional dialect is different than mine - e.g., I say "sneakers"; she says "tennis shoes" - and I've been having to consciously alter some of my natural usage to fit her voice, but her native region appears to also be "towards", based on usage of friends from her area, so that, at least, works out.

I tend to ignore what the AP Style Guide has to say, because I'm not printing a newspaper. I'm pretty sure that the sole logic behind their recommendation to leave off the 's' is that it takes up fewer column-inches that way.

helmut_meukel ๐Ÿšซ

@BlacKnight

I found one paragraph where I have "upward thrust" and "upwards movement" in consecutive sentences.

As a non-native English speaker I ever had problems with pronouncing the 'th' and to me a 's' at the end of the preceding word will increase this problem. Therefore it's easier (for me) to say 'upward thrust' than 'upwards thrust'. Maybe you unconsciously do the same.

HM.

PotomacBob ๐Ÿšซ

@BlacKnight

I tend to ignore what the AP Style Guide has to say, because I'm not printing a newspaper. I'm pretty sure that the sole logic behind their recommendation to leave off the 's' is that it takes up fewer column-inches that way.

It's hard to judge AP's motive from a distance. One possibility: If toward and towards mean precisely the same thing, why waste the extra space needed to add the meaningless 's'?

awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@PotomacBob

Sometimes it makes a phrase easier to articulate. A hard 'd' ending makes an uncomfortable bedfellow to a word starting with a hard beginning, but a soft 's' in the middle makes it a lot easier.

Eg

'I'm going toward town' versus 'I'm going towards town'.

AJ

Replies:   graybyrd
graybyrd ๐Ÿšซ

@awnlee jawking

'I'm going toward town' versus 'I'm going towards town'.

And there's those of us who simply say, "I'm going to town."

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ

@graybyrd

And there's those of us who simply say, "I'm going to town."

There's a difference between "to" and "toward."

"Toward" means in the direction of.

"To" is the destination.

Replies:   graybyrd
graybyrd ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

@Switch Blayde

Thanks for the pedantic kickback. For most of us, howsomever, when we go toward town we generally intend to go there. Unless the context of the directions dictate that just before we get to town, we veer left and skirt the town limits to arrive at the new mall.

Words don't sit hovering in limbo; context has much to do with choice and meaning. As does habit and fads. I choose to use simple language; others utilize more verbose constructions to promulgate motivating circumstances and situations.

Add to say: a cliffhanger would be far more interesting if the shrub to which our protagonist clings 1,500 meters above the thundering cataract proved to be an entire new species, hitherto undiscovered and unknown, and if he survives he'll probably receive a presigious award for its discovery and classification, hence advancing his career toward new heights of recognition.

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking ๐Ÿšซ

@graybyrd

hence advancing his career toward new heights of recognition.

My own usage seems broadly similar to DS's, so I would use 'towards' in that context to reflect movement.

AJ

BlacKnight ๐Ÿšซ

@PotomacBob

It's hard to judge AP's motive from a distance. One possibility: If toward and towards mean precisely the same thing, why waste the extra space needed to add the meaningless 's'?

If "color" and "colour" mean precisely the same thing, why waste the extra space needed to add the meaningless 'u'?

It's because in my native usage, "towards" has an 's'.

I'm much less concerned about "wasting space" than AP, because their style guide was designed for newspapers and all the limitations and concerns involved in that, where wasting space means you have to save it somewhere else, or add more physical pages and the expense that comes with that.

But in my case, a "wasted" byte here and there isn't going to break my hard drive. It's likely, in fact, that it'll have literally no effect on hard drive space used, because the filesystem allocates disk space in 1kB blocks, so odds are it'll just be using dead space in a block that would be wasted as filesystem overhead anyway.

Similarly, a few extra bytes aren't going to break my bandwidth budget. I've got unlimited upload anyway.

Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ

@BlacKnight

I tend to ignore what the AP Style Guide has to say, because I'm not printing a newspaper. I'm pretty sure that the sole logic behind their recommendation to leave off the 's' is that it takes up fewer column-inches that way.

I agree that's often their motive, like not using the Oxford comma.

But this wasn't from AP or Chicago. It was from Grammarly.

Replies:   BlacKnight
BlacKnight ๐Ÿšซ

@Switch Blayde

I agree that's often their motive, like not using the Oxford comma.

But this wasn't from AP or Chicago. It was from Grammarly.

The excerpt you posted cites both CMOS and AP, and it's only the AP citation that recommends not using the 's'.

I'm not sure what any of this has to do with cliffhangers, though.

Jason Samson ๐Ÿšซ

@BlacKnight

I'm not sure what any of this has to do with cliffhangers, though.

Well I for one am in suspense about how the life of this thread will be saved by by the next post! And the next! And the next!

Switch Blayde ๐Ÿšซ

@BlacKnight

The excerpt you posted cites both CMOS and AP, and it's only the AP citation that recommends not using the 's'.

Oh, I understand. This was the middle part of what I posted.

Toward is the preferred spelling in the United States and Canada. In other English-speaking countries, such as the United Kingdom and Australia, towards is the more common spelling. The Chicago Manual of Style notices this difference; The AP Stylebook recommends using the shorter spelling.

I was referencing the 1st two sentences, that the "s" wasn't used in the U.S and Canada, but was in the UK and Australia.

The way I interpreted what came after it was that Chicago "notices the differences" (that is, agrees) while the AP doesn't (never an "s").

Grammar Girl agrees with what Grammarly says:

"Toward" and "towards" are both correct and interchangeable: you can use either one because they mean the same thing. Many sources say the "s" is more common in Britain than in the United States, so you should take into account what the convention is in your country, and use "towards" in Britain and "toward" in the U.S.

And so does many other places I've seen it. However, I have to force myself not to use the "s" and, as I said, I keep seeing the "s" on posts from everyone, like the post I replied to.

So I wonder if what Grammarly and Grammar Girl and others are saying is old news and people everywhere are switching to using the "s".

red61544 ๐Ÿšซ

Interesting discussion. To me, cliffhangers are like the kid in the playground who yells, "Ha ha. I know something you don't know." After the second or third time, the other kids say, "So what! We don't care." You don't need a cliffhanger to keep people reading; you need a good plot and a well-written story.

William Turney Morris ๐Ÿšซ

Okay, I ended the first book in a series where the MC was hit by a car, struck his head on the road, and as he drifted into unconsciousness, he had a vision about one of the main women in his life.

I got a torrent of abuse from readers - basically - "how dare I kill off the hero". Of course, he wasn't killed... but they didn't know. At least I had the first few chapters of the next book ready to roll, so no one really got too upset.

Replies:   Redsliver
Redsliver ๐Ÿšซ

@William Turney Morris

Wow, I'd have kept that hero dead. If you evoked that kind of emotion in your readers and they believed you? I'm jealous.

ystokes ๐Ÿšซ

I don't mind cliffhangers as long as I don't have to wait months or even years for the next chapter.

tendres ๐Ÿšซ
Updated:

I found a solution. I wrote a chapter with a religious group know as cliffhangers. They all die when their red giant collapses into a black hole.

Their leader has the same name as the first reader who complained about there being too many cliffhangers. :)

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@tendres

Now that's funny. :)

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