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Is it just me?

Niceguy2000 🚫
Updated:

And it might be.

I'm trained as a journalist where brevity and getting to the point is valued.

Is anyone else a put-off by some of the seemingly endless stories here?

I have seen many with a promising plot synopsis, but when I see the number of chapters (and the story is still being written and has been for years) and a million+ word count, I lose interest.

The average novel has 80-100,000 words. A 1000 page novel would be 300,000 words.

I admit I haven't read any of these magnum works I'm referring to, but come on, none of the great authors used a million and a half words to tell their story.

Do these authors really think they're worthy of more of your time than ... (insert your favorite author here)?

I'm aware that people fall in love with their own story/voice and characters, but come on, at some point wrap it up.

If my writing professors are correct, knowing when to wrap it up is the mark of a pro over an amateur.

I know nobody is forcing anyone to read these stories, but still, I think writers should have more respect for their readers than endless meandering.

Just my opinion. Again no disrespect meant, just wondering if anyone agrees.

shinerdrinker 🚫

@Niceguy2000

That way of thinking would force the authors to consider book size as the preeminent factor for their story. Not where the story goes but how the story will fit within the prescribed borders of a book.

Being online, this is a unique space where the number of words in a story does not dictate the size or breadth of a story.

While becoming conveniently book-sized is a goal for most writers here, a vast community of authors allows the story to spread as much as they would like. Then there are others, like me, didn't begin their stories to confine them into a book or even a series of books. But then again, the idea of seeing a book of my current story is amusing and ego-massaging.

Yep, with a nice edit and reformatting, you can see the next version of my story. But then again... THAT is another story.

Tee hee, see what I did there.

--Shinerdrinker

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@shinerdrinker

you can see the next version of my story

With respect, we haven't seen a complete first version yet.

AJ

Niceguy2000 🚫

@Niceguy2000

S...
Nice reply.😁

I wasn't really expecting authors to curtail their vision...after all here there are no worries about size, cost, or the number of trees used.

My main point here is knowing when to park the ego and wrap it up.

Switch Blayde 🚫
Updated:

@Niceguy2000

The average novel has 80-100,000 words.

Those sizes are because of traditional publishing costs (btw, SciFi is more like 120,000–150,000). But I know what you mean. And it's not only the million-word stories. Most stories I read would be stronger if shorter.

If you get the chance, watch the movie "Genius." It's about Thomas Wolf (Jude Law) and his editor Max Perkins (Colin Firth). Wolf wrote massive manuscripts. Perkins edited them down to great novels.

Replies:   Pixy  awnlee jawking
Pixy 🚫

@Switch Blayde

Wolf wrote massive manuscripts. Perkins edited them down to great novels.

But did he really? All he did was enforce one person's (his) opinion on everyone else. Was the original version even better? Did it contain nuance that could have changed your perceivement of characters and their motivations?

We will never know.

If a story is good, most people appear not to care about the length.

Perfect examples in film, are the Peter Jackson LOTR trilogy and the extended version of Aliens. An editor trimmed down LOTR because it was perceived that there was no interest in long films. Yet a large proportion of fans prefer the extended versions (I do, so in that regard, I'm biased). And the same with Aliens, the longer version is just better, even if logically, it doesn't make numerical sense.

Needless bloat is a serious issue, in that regard, you have a perfectly valid point. On the same topic, there is also the other thread discussing the existence of extraneous sex scenes in stories that serve no function other to than to tick off some checklist held by the writer in their head.

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde 🚫

@Pixy

But did he really? All he did was enforce one person's (his) opinion on everyone else. Was the original version even better?

Thomas Wolf didn't think so, so he finally left Perkins. I guess we'll never know for sure, but the novels Perkins edited were bestsellers and the ones Wolf published without Perkins' editing were not.

awnlee jawking 🚫

@Switch Blayde

SciFi is more like 120,000–150,000

The early great SciFi authors could do the job in 60,000 words. It's only the modern trend for world building that has resulted in the size expansion. Does world building advance the plot? I'm not sure it does.

AJ

Pixy 🚫

@awnlee jawking

Does world building advance the plot?

Good question.

I recently re-read David Gemmell's 'Legend', a task that was easily achieved over a pleasant afternoon and one of the things that struck me, was the sparsity of the world. I hadn't realised just how 'bare' the novel was and that a young teenage 'me' who read it for the first time, had created a lot of memories about the novel that didn't actually exist. I had just read the book then 'filled in' the missing bits with my own imagination, then after a while those memories had become 'cannon' (in my own mind, at least).

The other, very obvious, observation, is that nowadays, I would feel short-changed to buy a book that I could read in a few hours. In fact, nowadays I will ignore any 'thin' book I see in a shop bookshelf, which would mean that I would actually deprive myself of early Pratchett and Robert Asprin novels, but with the cost of a 150 page book the same as a 400 page novel (DTP), there is a financial incentive to ignore the thinner works. Even though the quality over quantity is still a valid consideration (Though there is no guarantee the thinner book is going to be a better read over the thicker and vice versa).

Harry Potter novels are a literary doorstop, and yet, those novels did more for children's literacy levels of the time in the UK, than the proscribed English curriculum. A standing joke amongst English teachers of the period. So much so, that many teachers actually pushed for replacement of the 'classics' (Shakespeare and the like) with Rowling's books because children struggle with the archaic language and social 'norms' of the period in which the novels were penned. Rowling also has the ability to write about serious (current) social aspects in a way that young children can understand (Racism and Apartheid amongst many others) and relate to, and yet, not in a preachy way.

There is a heck of a lot of world building in a Potter book.

Indeed, I have noticed a considerable uptake in private messages of support in relation to my own stories here, (The last year or two of my submissions) that praise me for my world building, and which state that the world building is what makes the stories so enjoyable (to them).

So to cap my thoughts on the matter. Does world building advance the plot? No, I don't think that it particularly does, but what it does do, is make the story richer, and more enjoyable for the reader.

awnlee jawking 🚫

@Pixy

I had just read the book then 'filled in' the missing bits with my own imagination, then after a while those memories had become 'cannon' (in my own mind, at least).

IMO that's a sign of good writing. Readers engage more if they have to fill in the gaps then they can imagine it how they want. If authors spoon-feed too much detail, it can put readers off if the details contrast too strongly with how they'd envisage things.

AJ

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@awnlee jawking

Readers engage more if they have to fill in the gaps then they can imagine it how they want.

If there are too many gaps, there's nothing to trigger their imagination.

There has to be a point where it's too little detail, other wise the best written story is a blank page.

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@Dominions Son

Perhaps people had more imagination when the likes of HG Wells and Jules Verne were contemporary.

AJ

Grey Wolf 🚫

@Pixy

So to cap my thoughts on the matter. Does world building advance the plot? No, I don't think that it particularly does, but what it does do, is make the story richer, and more enjoyable for the reader.

I tried to pick a point to jump in and picked this one.

I think there's a disagreement about what 'world building' means that makes some of the later responses 'two ships passing in the night'.

Some people seem to think that it's 'appearance': how things look and sound and act and so forth.

Others seem to think that it's 'functionality': how things work, what the connection between things are, and so forth.

The first sort has its place, but is where 'fill in the gaps' matters. Sometimes less detail is better. Steven King mentions this a number of times - the best monster is the one you don't see on the page. Once you see the monster, it's inevitably shorter, smaller, and has fewer teeth than you imagined.

The second part is important, in my opinion. Part of it depends on the reader, though. Much fiction, and especially speculative fiction, 'handwaves' how economies interact, how societies function, where the stress points are, and so forth. That used to be more acceptable than it is now. Going back and looking at books from decades ago, sometimes it's obvious that the society can't really function in the way that it's described, or that one needs to really make up a whole lot of things to create a workable model.

That sort of world-building matters, I think, up to a point. One risks turning into Robert Jordan, or perhaps George R.R. Martin, where the small details of how things function and where things are placed in history can take up an enormous amount of space.

Rowling is somewhere in the middle. One can imagine that her world can, by and large, function, and there is a lot of 'texture,' but many details are left for the reader (and some, frankly, don't make sense when poked at too far). I suspect part of her writing is influenced by knowing that readers in her primary targeted age range are going to say 'why?' over and over and over again. If there's no viable 'why?' they will give up and read something else.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@Grey Wolf

The first sort has its place, but is where 'fill in the gaps' matters. Sometimes less detail is better.

I wont disagree with "Sometimes less detail is better." The problem is that taken too far, it can easily be worse.

Again as I said before, if you can't define a stopping point, the best possible story is a blank page.

There is necessarily a point beyond which less detail cannot be better.

That said, we could probably spend the next thousand years arguing about where that point is.

Grey Wolf 🚫

@Dominions Son

I wont disagree with "Sometimes less detail is better." The problem is that taken too far, it can easily be worse.

Oh, definitely. Completely agree. That point will vary from reader to reader, too, and quite a bit. There's no one answer. It'll vary, and that's fine.

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@Grey Wolf

fine

As a matter of interest, have you counted the number of times you use 'fine' in VOAT?

AJ

awnlee jawking 🚫

@Dominions Son

the best possible story is a blank page.

I think that's an absurd claim. You can put on an entertaining play with no props. You can write an engaging story with no 'wallpaper'. Even children can entertain themselves with just a cardboard box to play with.

AJ

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫
Updated:

@awnlee jawking

I think that's an absurd claim.

Yes it is, it's purpose is to point out that "less detail is better" without any limits is itself absurd.

You can put on an entertaining play with no props.

And yet professional stage productions that people actually pay to go see are almost never done that way.

You can write an engaging story with no 'wallpaper'.

I do not agree.

awnlee jawking 🚫

@Dominions Son

And yet professional stage productions that people actually pay to go see are almost never done that way.

I'm not au fait with what's popular, but reviews of commercial productions in London show a wide mix, from lavish productions with elaborate stagings to minimalist productions, sometimes with only one thespian playing all the parts.

AJ

awnlee jawking 🚫

@Dominions Son

You can write an engaging story with no 'wallpaper'.

I do not agree.

Wow, it took a lot of searching to dig up the name, but Dennis Lehane is famous for writing crime thrillers with minimal wallpaper. I've read his work and it's okay for an American ;-)

AJ

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@awnlee jawking

but Dennis Lehane is famous for writing crime thrillers with minimal wallpaper

minimal wallpaper > no wallpaper. This example does not support the thesis that "You can write an engaging story with no 'wallpaper'"

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde 🚫

@Dominions Son

does not support the thesis that "You can write an engaging story with no 'wallpaper'"

The thread like others before it reverted to "black and white," "yes or no," "all or nothing." No such thing in writing fiction. Sometimes a lot of detail works. Sometimes not much detail works. Even within the same novel.

btw, what's wallpaper in a story?

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@Switch Blayde

Sometimes a lot of detail works. Sometimes not much detail works.

Agreed, from when I first stepped into this thread I have been arguing for a middle ground.

btw, what's wallpaper in a story?

awnlee jawking is the one who introduced the 'wallpaper' term. From context, I presume that he's referring to things like scenery and props.

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@Dominions Son

awnlee jawking is the one who introduced the 'wallpaper' term. From context, I presume that he's referring to things like scenery and props.

I didn't originate the term, although it may have come from a different thread. Someone mentioned authors describing the wallpaper in a room. A no-frills author like Dennis Lehane would only describe wallpaper if it were trying to kill someone ;:)

AJ

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@awnlee jawking

I didn't originate the term,

You introduced it to this thread.

Dominions Son 🚫
Updated:

@awnlee jawking

Does world building advance the plot? I'm not sure it does.

Probably not. It makes for better stories anyway. Scenery matters. If it didn't, you would see Broadway plays acted on a bare stage with no set dressing or props and the actors in their street clothes.

Replies:   Radagast
Radagast 🚫

@Dominions Son

I saw Waiting for Godot like that. TBF it could have had costumes and props from The King and I and would still have been deathly boring.

Switch Blayde 🚫
Updated:

@awnlee jawking

The early great SciFi authors could do the job in 60,000 words.

I was referring to what publishers today would find acceptable in that genre. My reference was that publishers try to limit their risk so they set word boundaries by genre.

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@Switch Blayde

I was referring to what publishers today would find acceptable in that genre.

According to the 'new scifi' reviews in my newspaper, there are some traditional length stories being published, so I dispute your term 'acceptable'. However the majority seem to be doorstop size and heavy on world-building.

AJ

Replies:   Switch Blayde  rustyken
Switch Blayde 🚫
Updated:

@awnlee jawking

so I dispute your term 'acceptable'

Acceptable meaning a new (unproven) author within a genre. The longer the novel, the higher the publisher's expenses and therefore risk. We're talking about everything from editing to printing costs. And of course the price reflects the costs so then they have to worry about how many people will pay that much.

Of course if it's a proven author, the publishers are more flexible. Known author = less risk. And then there's the super long manuscript by an unknown author that is just perfect. They'll take a risk on those too.

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@Switch Blayde

The longer the novel, the higher the publisher's expenses and therefore risk.

But

SciFi is more like 120,000–150,000

and

I was referring to what publishers today would find acceptable in that genre.

If 120,000-150,000 words are the 'acceptable' size for a modern dead tree scifi story, what length do stories have to be to be unacceptable?

AJ

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde 🚫

@awnlee jawking

what length do stories have to be to be unacceptable?

I have no idea. I'm not in the publishing industry.

rustyken 🚫

@awnlee jawking

Congratulations. You have a newspaper that contains content.

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@rustyken

You have a newspaper that contains content.

Barely. I compared a recent edition to one from before Covid. These days, all the actual news is down to a couple of pages, with minimal local stuff. Some of the regular sections - book and film reviews, medical, financial etc are ok, but they each come on separate days. The rest is full of adverts and biased opinion pieces from their army of in-house columnists.

AJ

Niceguy2000 🚫

@Niceguy2000

Thanks for bring up the "less is more" (something drilled into us in writing classes) point.
While online writing gives one infinite pages, that doesn't mean you should use the all. :)

A good writer can write concisely.
And we really don't need to know the family backstory of a every minor character or the exact car they drive (don't tell that to a popular series author, I enjoyed the basic story he was telling, but he really didn't know when to step back (aka..shut up).

The most difficult stories I have written were on the subjects I know most about. It is very difficult to edit yourself.
Likewise, Editing other people's work is taxing...although most of my experience in that is with working with complete amateurs where you end up basically rewriting their piece.

John Demille 🚫
Updated:

@Niceguy2000

I know nobody is forcing anyone to read these stories, but still, I think writers should have more respect for their readers than endless meandering.

Some stories written here are not meant to tell a specific story with a neat start-middle-end. Many are a narrative of a life.

Take for example cmsix's works, many of them are about the journey, not the destination. They are still a good read even though now almost none are concluded.

Think of them like a soap opera. A nice ending that wraps up all the threads and gives it finality is not necessarily the goal.

In my discussions with Lazeez, many of the site's users are long time users, according to him, some reader accounts have been very active since the start in the 1990s, such readers, who may log in daily, can follow a long running serial and enjoy it quite a bit and miss it when it ends.

Storiesonline has existed way longer than one would realize. Lazeez started it in 1997, that's 27 years ago. It's easy to see the number and not think about what it actually means. Some readers who started reading here after they had retired for example because it's free entertainment, are now in their 80s and 90s, if not dead. I know I was in my late 20s when I met lazeez and now we're both in our 50s. That's a lot of time, and many stories follow that kind thing. Such long running stories can be daunting to start, but if you have plenty of time to read, if you're retired for example, then why the hell not. You can be entertained for months on end.

ETA: I just realized that I've been frequenting this site for close to half of my life!

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@John Demille

ETA: I just realized that I've been frequenting this site for close to half of my life!

But were you born yesterday? :-)

AJ

awnlee jawking 🚫

@Niceguy2000

I have seen many with a promising plot synopsis, but when I see the number of chapters (and the story is still being written and has been for years) and a million+ word count, I lose interest.

They're not novels but soap operas. SOL authors tend to get rewarded with higher scores for greater length, so they churn out similar stuff time and time again. They have their niche readers who are happy to lap it up.

The readership of SOL is also a factor - the readers tend to be older people who are rich in time, if not money. The real world is different and the prolix authors wouldn't achieve success in the dead tree world.

AJ

Replies:   Niceguy2000
Niceguy2000 🚫
Updated:

@awnlee jawking

You and John D earlier, both used the term Soap Opera (or narrative of life)..I hadn't thought of that but you're probably correct.

I'm thinking of literal, linear stories, instead these guys are doing it to give them something to do.

Perhaps it's best I have many other things to occupy my post retirement time than read fiction here...not that there is anything wrong with that (thanks, Jerry S.).

Still, until I'm ONLY able to read stories here (i.e. nothing better to do or physically unable to do anything else), if a guy wants me to read 1.95 million words in 250+ chapters, he better be Hemingway/Steinbeck/and your favorite (in other words somebody good) all rolled into one.

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@Niceguy2000

if a guy wants me to read 1.95 million words in 250+ chapters, he better be Hemingway/Steinbeck/and your favorite all rolled into one.

Weren't Hemingway and Steinbeck relatively concise authors? ;-)

AJ

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde 🚫

@awnlee jawking

Weren't Hemingway and Steinbeck relatively concise authors? ;-)

Hemingway was. He was a journalist and a short story writer.

Ernest Hemingway's "iceberg" theory is his strategy of fiction writing in which most of the story is hidden, much like an iceberg underneath the ocean. The largest percentage of an iceberg is underwater (not visible) and is subsequently the strongest part of the iceberg. In the same way, the strongest part of a Hemingway story is what is hidden from the reader and if applicable, revealed later.

Hemingway developed the style as a result of being a journalist, a profession which requires conciseness due to space restraints in printed newspapers. Hemingway believed that the application of the iceberg theory created the perfect short story, and the more details the writer strips away, the more powerful the story is.

The "iceberg theory" is also called the "theory of omission."

awnlee jawking 🚫

@Switch Blayde

My now defunct writers' group was pretty much in agreement that much of the detail an author thinks up should be omitted from the story. As you say, it can be revealed later if necessary. And also it can be changed, if future sequels require things to behave differently.

JK Rowling incorporated too much detail in her early books, so later books were inconsistent because they required different behaviour.

AJ

Replies:   Pixy
Pixy 🚫

@awnlee jawking

JK Rowling incorporated too much detail in her early books,

It should be pointed out that those books sold very well, so there is an argument that the level of detail was 'just right'. Critics and learned individuals might claim otherwise, but very few critics and learned individuals write popular novels, so by default, they really should be ignored...

There is a reason that old adage holds true, even today: Those that can, do. Those that can't, become critics and teachers (Or instructors, for the trades).

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@Pixy

It should be pointed out that those books sold very well, so there is an argument that the level of detail was 'just right'.

As a sometime editor and proofreader, I hate continuity errors. But I guess I'm not a typical reader.

AJ

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@awnlee jawking

As a sometime editor and proofreader, I hate continuity errors.

What do continuity errors have to do with the level of detail?

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@Dominions Son

As I said above, JK Rowling introduced too much detail in her early books. The later books required things to work differently, thus creating continuity and consistency errors.

AJ

richardshagrin 🚫

@Switch Blayde

"iceberg

just ice may be unjust.

doctor_wing_nut 🚫
Updated:

@Niceguy2000

Is anyone else a put-off by some of the seemingly endless stories here?

Yes.

I've given up on some good stories here because of (in my opinion) needless repetition, or agonizingly detailed descriptions of the size of a room or object, or preparing a meal.

It seems if you ask some people what time it is, they will tell you how to build a watch. Brevity is under-valued.

edit - I'd prefer you leave a little room for my imagination to fill in some of the details. It helps keep me engaged.

Dominions Son 🚫

@doctor_wing_nut

Brevity is under-valued.

It's overvalued by some. For me, too much brevity is just as unreadable.

What's needed is a middle ground.

Replies:   whisperclaw
whisperclaw 🚫

@Dominions Son

Perhaps so, but I have encountered very few β€”if anyβ€”stories on SOL where the problem was too much brevity, but plenty with not enough.

Dominions Son 🚫

@whisperclaw

Perhaps so, but I have encountered very few β€”if anyβ€”stories on SOL where the problem was too much brevity,

https://storiesonline.net/s/76751/3some-convo

There are 1779 stories on SOL that are under 400 words.

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@Dominions Son

I believe he meant 'brevity' in the sense of not having enough detail. The appropriate level of detail will be different for flash stories than novels; the length of the story is immaterial.

AJ

Switch Blayde 🚫

@whisperclaw

I have encountered very few β€”if anyβ€”stories on SOL where the problem was too much brevity

I'm reading one now. And I finished another by the same author with the same brevity problem so that's how he writes. In his case, it's not too little detail. If anything, he has too much detail (wallpaper).

But his brevity problem is the lack of words in transitions. You finish a paragraph and β€” wamβ€” the next pragraaph jumps to a different time and place. It's very confusing. All he needed to do was put in a few words to transition correctly.

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@Switch Blayde

But his brevity problem is the lack of words in transitions.

I may have read the same story. My thought was that the author didn't know to use the line to denote a scene break.

AJ

awnlee jawking 🚫

@doctor_wing_nut

I've given up on some good stories here because of (in my opinion) needless repetition, or agonizingly detailed descriptions of the size of a room or object, or preparing a meal.

I sometimes get the feeling that if someone published the Haynes Starship Enterprise Manual on SOL, not a few readers would rate it their favourite novel :-)

AJ

REP 🚫

@Niceguy2000

I'm trained as a journalist where brevity and getting to the point is valued.

That is true of journalists for they have a limited amount of space for their articles.

Authors are different. They are telling a story. Authors can be divided into those who go through publishers who print hardcopy books and those who publish electronically.

Professional authors have to publish new stories to retain their followers and make money. Writing a good story takes time. The longer the story, the more time required to write it and the fewer stories published. That is one of the driving factors for writing shorter stories.

Amateur authors, such as most of those here at SOL, don't get paid money for their stories. The main limiting factors to the length of their stories are: their imaginations and the amount of time they are willing to expend on a story. Amateur authors do not require an end point for their stories. They can tell the story of their MC's life. RoustWriter is a perfect example of that type of author. Arlene and Jeff was a chapter a week for about 16 years. I found the story interesting; although in my personal opinion, RoustWriter had too many subplots that didn't seem to be finalized.

when I see the number of chapters (and the story is still being written and has been for years) and a million+ word count, I lose interest.

When you see a story like that, do you even sample a few chapters to find out if the story is worth reading? If not, you are missing out on some good stories. Or is it the idea of reading a million+ words? Granted you may have other stories that you are interested in reading and a limited amount of time to read. My library contains 83 stories and 34 of those stories are over 1 MB in size. At the rate I add and read new stories, I will likely never read most of the longer stories, even though the ratings indicate they would probably be a good read. Some of those 83 stories have been in my library since May of 2016.

Replies:   Switch Blayde  Mushroom
Switch Blayde 🚫

@REP

do you even sample a few chapters to find out if the story is worth reading?

I have, and more than a few chapters. I hear the praise. I see the 9+ score. I say, "This gotta be good." And many times it starts out good. But then it just keeps going: more of the same over and over again, meandering, no real conflict, sub-conflicts not being resolved, too many new characters being added, the original concept gone, etc. I find what started out as a good story became boring. Then I say, "Man, that could have been a good story if he stayed on course and just finished it at the right time."

But that's me.

Replies:   REP
REP 🚫

@Switch Blayde

But that's me.

That is me also. If the story does not live up to what I expect in the first couple of chapters, I bail.

Mushroom 🚫

@REP

When you see a story like that, do you even sample a few chapters to find out if the story is worth reading? If not, you are missing out on some good stories.

And in essence, a great many of those are akin to the old "Serial Novels" of a century ago. And yes, that was a huge thing starting in the 1860s and lasting for about a half century. Where an author would publish a chapter each week or month, and the stories sometimes became massive.

The original version of "The Count of Monte Cristo" was written in that way, and was 139 chapters over 2 years. And there are some that are much longer than even that and were written over more than 5 years.

Most of those that write the "long stories" tend to post them as they write. And I admit it can be intimidating to consider reading such a massive story when it is finished, most of the authors would have posted it a chapter at a time so it was not so intimidating when first posted.

Replies:   Dicrostonyx
Dicrostonyx 🚫

@Mushroom

It is worth noting that many of those serial stories were published that way because that's where the money was. Dostoevsky published The Brothers Karamazov in serial format in order to pay off debts, but the novel was completed before publication began. Dickens also typically did this.

However, serial publications were not publishing a chapter each month; they were hitting a specific word count. Dickens' A Tale of Two Cities has 49 chapters which were published in 31 weekly instalments in "All the Year Round".

Some authors of the time were know to clean up their prose after serial publication and release a new version that more closely followed a traditional novel structure.

I think this is the big point that is often missed in modern discussions of "long stories" and serial publications. People see the old serials and think they can just write a chapter a month and everything will turn out fine. They don't realize that those old serials were typically being written as traditional novels and only being published in serial form.

Replies:   Mushroom
Mushroom 🚫

@Dicrostonyx

However, serial publications were not publishing a chapter each month;

That largely depended on the periodical that they were published in. And a great many were actually weekly periodicals. There were magazines and newspapers in that era that were printed each week, and would include 2 or more stories like that from different authors.

And many of the "pulp" magazines of the 20th century were essentially the same. That is the kind of thing that gave people like Robert Howard, H.P. Lovecraft, Leslie Charteris, Rex Stout, and many others a regular income. By that time the "serial novel" had fallen out of favor, so many authors turned to writing a huge number of short stories.

Robert Howard alone published over 300 short stories, he never published a novel. And they were only combined into anthologies after his death.

And there would be attempts to bring it back in the latter 20th century. I know Playboy made several attempts to print serial novels in the 1960s and 1970s. And Stephen King tried it in 1996 with "The Green Mile", releasing one novella each month for six months.

whisperclaw 🚫

@Niceguy2000

You're not alone. I'm not interested in never ending soap operas. I want a structured, well told story without filler.

I feel like at least some of the problem with the type of stories you describe that SOL makes it easy to write and publish as they go. So authors do a brain dump on the page and publish, when a good developmental editor would be able to look at a finished work and say "this chapter neither advances the story nor tells us anything new about the characters." Or "these three pages should be cut to three paragraphs."

muyoso 🚫
Updated:

@Niceguy2000

A lot of the stories on here don't have an actual story. They are like a diary retelling of events. There is no real plot or purpose. I don't personally understand who wants to read that, but some people do apparently. That's how some stories get out of control in length. These stories have so many more problems other than just the rambling never-ending nature, as they typically have the main character be one dimensionally good, everyone around him treats him like a god, any "villain" is caricature levels of evil, no one acts realistically to things, etc. I have read a couple of these stories and the majority of them I had to stop reading because they were just absurd.

Another way they get out of control is that an author writes a short story and it gets popular and then they just never let it die and keep writing and writing.

Replies:   DBActive
DBActive 🚫

@muyoso

The reason I wind up reading some of these long, long day-to-day stories is that I got started at the beginning with no idea that the author was going to write the equivalent of a dozen Russian novels.
Then, like any soap opera you keep reading hoping something is eventually going to happen.

Niceguy2000 🚫

@Niceguy2000

DBActive, @muyoso...

I think you're correct. If you look at the author's blog of a certain 1.9 million word, 250 chapter work it sounds that what began as a story is now a daily hobby for him to write and others to read.
Instead of gardening, painting or working on old cars, it is what he does, likewise his readers read it out of habit like others watch a soap opera.
Again, no offense meant but spending that much time reading an unstructured (undisciplined?) story has no appeal to me.

Replies:   Dominions Son  DBActive
Dominions Son 🚫

@Niceguy2000

Again, no offense meant but spending that much time reading an unstructured (undisciplined?) story has no appeal to me.

But it does appeal to some people (Or no one would watch soap operas on TV). There's room here for stories that serve niche markets.

I don't think it's appropriate for people to complain about the mere existence of stories for which they are not part of the target audience.

Replies:   Pixy  Michael Loucks
Pixy 🚫

@Dominions Son

I don't think it's appropriate for people to complain about the mere existence of stories for which they are not part of the target audience.

πŸ‘

Michael Loucks 🚫

@Dominions Son

I don't think it's appropriate for people to complain about the mere existence of stories for which they are not part of the target audience.

Sadly, that's where we are in society β€” "It's not for me, therefore it's not for anyone and probably ought to be banned" is the norm.

Replies:   solitude
solitude 🚫

@Michael Loucks

Sadly, that's where we are in society β€” "It's not for me, therefore it's not for anyone and probably ought to be banned" is the norm.

"Why are you wasting my time by writing stories for a target audience that does not include me? Get back to your real job!"

It's good that people generously donate their stories to this site, and that this site caters to reader with a variety of tastes (in subject matter, as well as in style of writing).

As a reader, I just had do develop my own set of guidelines for deciding whether to invest my time in a particular story. Fortunately this site offers plenty clues to help me with this filtering when I don't know the author:tags, story descriptions, scores, download counts, posting history and story status - but perhaps more importantly reviews and comments in the forum; thank you to those who contribute!

DBActive 🚫

@Niceguy2000

Some I have abandoned - the Stupid Boy and OSL series for example. I gave up on that when it became clear that nothing more was going to happen than the hero fucking more beautiful women and generally being the greatest in the world at everything. At least Summer Camp had the mystery of the wife at the end.

JoeBobMack 🚫
Updated:

@Niceguy2000

Do these authors really think they're worthy of more of your time than ... (insert your favorite author here)?

I see no justification for suggesting that any author on SOL thinks their writing is better than (your favorite author). It is possible that some of the authors you disparage with your post are among their favorite authors for some SOL readers.

And, as someone who has read several stories that fit your description and enjoyed them, I say they offer a different experience and type of reading pleasure than traditionally published books.

So, I'd suggest, "to each their own."

Niceguy2000 🚫
Updated:

@Niceguy2000

Pixy, Dominions Son, JoeBobMack, M Loucks...

Read what I actually wrote (as opposed to what you think I said).

I wasn't critical of any specific story, I didn't name a story. At any rate, I think it's a fair question.asking about overlong series IN GENERAL.

BTW I'm also critical of unfinished series where readers are several chapters in and are left high and dry.

I didn't call for banning anyone.

To each his own, especially here where there are all kinds of stuff, I don't personally do/approve of, read or enjoy.

My criticism of never ending stories is no more a call for banning than someone giving a story a low score.

As my thread title plainly asks, I was wondering if it was just me that finds some series lack of structure annoying.

The answer is that some argee with me, some don't.

Hardly surprising.

As far as me criticising something "I'm not in the target audience for", I don't understand your point, by offering something here, SOL is a open multi genre forum, EVERYONE is seen by the author as a target audience.

It would be different if the site featured one type of story...sci-fi, or a particular fetish.

But here on SOL, there is no specific reader or target audience other than the very general erotica topic...but that's not even correct some many stories aren't erotic.

awnlee jawking 🚫

@Niceguy2000

EVERYONE is seen by the author as a target audience.

I'm not sure that's true. If it were, surely there would be no need for story codes.

Some (ahem!) of my stories are rather niche. They're not aimed at everyone, they're aimed at readers whose particular kink they happen to match.

I agree that all the hyperbole about banning is unwarranted.

AJ

Dominions Son 🚫

@Niceguy2000

I didn't call for banning anyone.

I didn't say you did. Nor did I mention banning at all.

To each his own,

My criticism of never ending stories...

If you are sincere about "to each his own", why the need to publicly criticize the never ending stories at all?

Move on read something else. There should be no need to tell the world you don't like them.

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde 🚫

@Dominions Son

why the need to publicly criticize the never ending stories at all?

It's a valid critique. Just like too much sex in a story. Or stories being too short. Or unfinished stories. Or stories with typos/grammar issues. Or stories without paragraphs. Or stories with unbelievable characters. Or stories with head-hopping.

If you believe in the 3- or 5-act structure, you expect a beginning, middle, and end. A story structure. And if you believe there is no plot without conflict, you expect a plot conflict with a conflict resolution at the end. If a story doesn't have that but simply wanders, it's valid to criticize that story.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@Switch Blayde

It's a valid critique.

I don't agree.

If you recognize that there is an audience for such stories, but you aren't part of it, there is no reason to say more than that, that you don't like stories like that.

To argue that they are objectively bad is necessarily to say you think such stories shouldn't exist (even if you aren't calling for banning them) despite the fact that other people like such stories.

Replies:   Switch Blayde  muyoso
Switch Blayde 🚫

@Dominions Son

To argue that they are objectively bad is necessarily to say you think such stories shouldn't exist (even if you aren't calling for banning them) despite the fact that other people like such stories.

I think head-hopping is bad. As a reader, I hate when the author jumps from one character's thoughts to another. I also dislike when the result is the lack of suspense/tension when you know both sides right away. As an author, I offer my opinion on what I learned from studying about POV. I'm not saying that's the right way, only that that's the way those in the industry say it's to be done.

I'm not saying stories with head-hopping should be banned from SOL. Hell, probably 80%-90% of the stories would vanish. I'm not even saying people don't like it. I personally believe SOL readers actually like head-hopping. They want to know what every character is thinking. I believe they even like telling rather than showing.

The Forum is a place to discuss stories. It's also a place to discuss writing. It's not a place to recommend banning of stories, or even that certain types of stories shouldn't be written/posted. Just because the OP gave his opinion doesn't mean those stories are crap. Simply that he doesn't like those types of stories and why he doesn't. I don't see anything wrong with that. People could learn from that discussion.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@Switch Blayde

I'm not saying that's the right way, only that that's the way those in the industry say it's to be done.

Personally I don't think they know half as much about what readers want as they think they do.

There are two types of errors generally. False positives and false negatives. It is usually difficult to minimize both at the same time.

For the dead tree publishing industry:
False positives = Books published that flop.
False Negatives = Books rejected that would have sold well.

Their false positive rate is fairly low. It is almost impossible that the false negative rate would be equally low.

And they have almost no data at all on their false negative rate.

False positive are losses on their balance sheets. False negatives just don't show up in their financial numbers.

They work very hard to avoid false positives. But like I said above, in almost any industry or type of endeavor, it is almost impossible to minimize false positives and false negatives at the same time. You can try to balance them, but then you aren't really minimizing either.

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@Dominions Son

Their false positive rate is fairly low.

It's a spectrum. There are extremely few blockbusters. And I expect publishers occasionally publish books that they suspect won't make a profit just to tick boxes.

And they have almost no data at all on their false negative rate.

I'd imagine the publishers who turned down JK Rowling have made no attempt to work out where they went wrong or what it cost them, but the data is available if they choose to look.

AJ

muyoso 🚫

@Dominions Son

This idea that if a story has a single person who likes it that its above being criticized is insane.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@muyoso

This idea that if a story has a single person who likes it that its above being criticized

That isn't at all what I said.

Grammar, word choice, spelling problems? Criticize away. Wall of text (no paragraphs)? Criticize away.

You don't like what the story is about? Move on and don't read it, but it should be tolerated.

Replies:   DBActive
DBActive 🚫

@Dominions Son

What is the problem with criticism? This part of the forum is "Story Discussion and Feedback."
The OP is discussing and giving feedback on stories.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@DBActive

What is the problem with criticism?

Do you really think it would be okay for someone to be on the forum complaining about people writing gay stories and how awful gay stories are?

In my opinion the "criticism" of soap opera style stories isn't any different than "criticism" of gay stories by someone who hates gay stories.

Switch Blayde 🚫

@Dominions Son

the "criticism" of soap opera style stories isn't any different than "criticism" of gay stories by someone who hates gay stories.

I think the difference is the latter is about content and the former is about story structure.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@Switch Blayde

I think the difference is the latter is about content and the former is about story structure.

I don't think it's fundamentally different. You don't like that style of story structure so you criticize it as "bad" or invalid.

Replies:   DBActive
DBActive 🚫

@Dominions Son

I don't see his post as anything more than discussion - he is turned off by stories of that length and asks if anyone else agrees with him. Sounds like discussion to me.
He doesn't ask for the stories to be removed. He doesn't tell people to stop reading them. He doesn't say the stories are bad. He doesn't say they are invalid. He just says he doesn't like them.
Neither would I think it wrong for someone to say: "I hate the stories about gays (or substitute any other subject.)" In fact there are lots of threads about avoiding tags, or how people are repulsed by different sujects. Stories about torture, rape, pedophilia, scat, water sports have all be attacked on here - why not gay, lesbian or heterosexual sex?

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫
Updated:

@DBActive

He just says he doesn't like them.

No, he went beyond that to argue that they are fundamentally bad stories.

If he said I don't like stories like that and actually stopped there, I wouldn't have a problem with it.

Replies:   muyoso
muyoso 🚫

@Dominions Son

There ARE a bunch of fundamentally bad stories that people still like. The fact that some people like them doesn't make them not terrible. A story can have a great premise and an ok plot and still be terrible due to the author messing up. Editors with these stories are worried about spelling errors and minor grammatical mistakes when they should be going at the story with a machete, not a scalpel. Too often the authors don't sit back and think about how the people they are writing about actually would speak in the real world, how the people they are writing about would actually react to the things they write, etc. Too many stories where 14 year old boys are speaking Shakespeare nonsense and too many stories where little to no thought was put into the main character and how people would actually react to him/her actions. Really makes the good stories stand out when they have realistic dialogue and interactions and reactions.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫
Updated:

@muyoso

There ARE a bunch of fundamentally bad stories that people still like. The fact that some people like them doesn't make them not terrible.

I don't disagree with this in principle.

However, a story being written in a never ending soap opera style doesn't by itself make it fundamentally bad just because you don't like stories written that way.

Too often the authors don't sit back and think about how the people they are writing about actually would speak in the real world, how the people they are writing about would actually react to the things they write, etc. Too many stories where 14 year old boys are speaking Shakespeare nonsense and too many stories where little to no thought was put into the main character and how people would actually react to him/her actions.

So criticize those things instead of complaining that it's written soap opera style.

I never at any point said that individual stories should be immune from any and all criticism just because some people like them.

My point is and always has been that certain kinds of criticisms are inappropriate.

Replies:   muyoso  Niceguy2000
muyoso 🚫

@Dominions Son

However, a story being written in a never ending soap opera style doesn't by itself make it fundamentally bad just because you don't like stories written that way.

That is true. I like a couple stories written in that way, although most are pretty mediocre and I have bailed on so many. When a series has like 10 books and a trillion words and a few months pass from the beginning to the end of the entire story, come on that is ridiculous.

I do criticize stories with valid complaints, where I am able but for some reason this site limits reviews to people who are slobbering sycophants or who are obviously just the author congratulating themselves. If the comment section on a story is closed, which it is for most, there is no way to complain about a story without starting up a new thread in the forums, which would lead to nothing but clutter. I'd have 10 threads started this week about stories that annoyed me to no end. It would be neat if the reviewers actually you know . . . reviewed the stories and gave readers actual feedback. But that is an old argument of mine, and as I have been told repeatedly reviews are only meant to promote reading of stories, which is ridiculous.

Niceguy2000 🚫

@Dominions Son

With all due respect you are
looking hard to find offense where none is intended.
You said (somewhere above)..

"No, he went beyond that to argue that they are fundamentally bad stories."

No I did not. I never criticized the content because as I mentioned in the first paragraph of my first post, I said I haven't read any of the never-ending stories.

One of the other replies criticized their one-dimensional characters and lack of cohesive plot, but it was NOT me.

I simply asked if 250 chapter, 2 million word stories have a place here.
Someone pointed out to me that they serve as soap operas, something I had not considered.
So, it seems that for some readers and authors here, they DO have a place here. Just (thankfully) not for me.
See, my question was answered.

I do have an issue with you comparing my comments with someone who hates gay stories...which is darn close to accusing me of hate speech.I don't think technical writing criticism is the same as criticizing an entire genre.
A work in a specific genre may be great, even if it is "not my cup of tea".
Whereas sloppy writing is still sloppy writing.

To recap, all I asked is if the world needs amateur porn stories which are longer than the greatest works of literature? Chill. :)

Replies:   REP  awnlee jawking
REP 🚫

@Niceguy2000

... if the world needs amateur porn stories which are longer than the greatest works of literature?

Interesting observation.

If you researched the authors of those great works of literature, you would find that many of their literary works were not recognized as great literature until after the author's death.

In today's world, a number of the stories classified as great literature are classified by some groups as porn - for example, Fanny Hill.

I also wonder about the lengths of those great works of literature. At the time they were written, the per page publishing costs were higher than they are now. If the publishers had had based their decision about publishing the stories using your 'I never read stories that are too long' philosophy, whatever 'too long' meant in that timeframe, then the great works of literature you refer to may never have been published.

Michael Loucks 🚫

@REP

I also wonder about the lengths of those great works of literature. At the time they were written, the per page publishing costs were higher than they are now.

Some very long classical stories were published in the newspaper as serials (A Tale of Two Cities) and some were published piecemeal (Les MisΓ©rables),. before being collated as a single published volume.

Switch Blayde 🚫
Updated:

@REP

In today's world, a number of the stories classified as great literature are classified by some groups as porn - for example, Fanny Hill.

DH Lawrence's works were banned as obscenity. Today he's considered one of the greatest Twentieth Century authors and those novels are taught in schools.

How about the movie "Poor Things." Filled with full frontal nudity, fucking, and masturbation. Emma Stone won an Oscar for performing those in the movie. Is it pornography? It would be if I wrote and produced it.

Replies:   REP
REP 🚫

@Switch Blayde

DH Lawrence's works were banned as obscenity. Today he's considered one of the greatest Twentieth Century authors and those novels are taught in schools.

I agree.

However, in some school districts, those novels are again considered pornographic, and banned literature in the schools. In some areas, the novels are also banned from public libraries.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@REP

In some areas, the novels are also banned from public libraries.

Do you have a reference for this? A google search did not turn up any references to the works of DH Lawrence being banned from public libraries in recent years.

Replies:   REP  palamedes
REP 🚫

@Dominions Son

when I said "those novels", I was thinking of novels containing sexual passages in general, not specifically the works of DH Lawrence.

palamedes 🚫

@Dominions Son

Do you have a reference for this? A google search did not turn up any references to the works of DH Lawrence being banned from public libraries in recent years.

Add the words Florida (leading state with bans 2500+ books) bans books to your google search.

Books like Anne Frank's Diary, Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglas, and authors like Lawrence or my personal favorite Dr. Seuss.

Also Florida education department has rejected or banned 54 mathematics textbooks.

There are many more states but Florida is taking the lead.

Replies:   DBActive  Dominions Son
DBActive 🚫
Updated:

@palamedes

There hasn't been a single book banned in the US. The fact that the government does not supply a book does not equate to banning.

Replies:   REP
REP 🚫
Updated:

@DBActive

There hasn't been a single book banned in the US.

Not true - see list for books banned by US Federal government. Lower levels of government have also banned books in their areas.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_books_banned_by_governments#United_States

The US Government has (or had) obscenity laws that prohibited the import of many books that were enforced by US Customs. Postal regulations prohibited the distribution of many books by the US Post Office. According to the article, a number of these laws were rescinded. There may still be laws on the books that are not currently being enforced.

The fact that the government does not supply a book does not equate to banning.

Which level of government - Federal, State, County, City?

Regardless of the level of government, one needs to determine why a book is not provided. Also, provided to whom - a school, public library, or other entity.

It is obvious that the government will not provide a book if the area served, or portions of that area, has banned the book.

Replies:   Dominions Son  DBActive
Dominions Son 🚫

@REP

Regardless of the level of government, one needs to determine why a book is not provided.

Have privately owned retail book stores been barred from selling the book? If the answer is no, it hasn't been banned.

Replies:   REP
REP 🚫

@Dominions Son

A book sold in a privately owned retail book store in a county can be banned in that county's public schools.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@REP

A book sold in a privately owned retail book store in a county can be banned in that county's public schools.

Ban means it can't be legally obtained anywhere by any means.

Removing it from or keeping it out of school libraries is categorically not a ban.

Replies:   REP
REP 🚫

@Dominions Son

Ban means it can't be legally obtained anywhere by any means.

Not true.

According to https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/ban, ban is the act of "legal or formal prohibition". When used as a verb, it is the act of issuing a prohibition. When used as a noun, it refers to the prohibition.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@REP

According to https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/ban, ban is the act of "legal or formal prohibition". When used as a verb, it is the act of issuing a prohibition. When used as a noun, it refers to the prohibition.

Which does not apply to keeping a book out of K-12 public school libraries for being inappropriate for minors.

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde 🚫

@Dominions Son

Which does not apply to keeping a book out of K-12 public school libraries for being inappropriate for minors.

Sure it does. A school board can ban a book. Lazeez can ban stories containing sex with someone under 14 years old.

DBActive 🚫

@REP

Have you actually read your link?
The law providing the most recent attempt at banning for sexual content you can find is 1959 and all but one was overturned on appeal. Apparently there was never an appeal filed in the Hecate County case.
For non-sexual content, the Pentagon Papers were published. The Operation Dark Heart case was not decided on freedom of press issues - it was essentially a contract case and all the redactions were published shortly after the case was decided.
The final one was a fraud case - fraud is not protected speech.

Replies:   REP
REP 🚫
Updated:

@DBActive

None of that matters regarding what I said. The US Government did ban books due to sexual content, which was my point. Legal action may have overturned the ban, but the book was banned by the government.

Replies:   Dominions Son  DBActive
Dominions Son 🚫

@REP

he US Government did ban books due to sexual content

80 years ago.

Replies:   REP
REP 🚫

@Dominions Son

80 years ago.

Nice to see you agree with me about the US Government banning books, even it if was 80 years ago.

DBActive 🚫
Updated:

@REP

US Government did try, unsuccessfully, to ban books due to sexual content.

Do you realize that persons, corporations and the government do things all the time that they are sued for and result in a determination that the acts were improper?

Do you realize that a handful of unsuccessful attempts decades ago to ban books doesn't support your claims and actually disprove your claims.

Replies:   REP
REP 🚫

@DBActive

Do you realize that overturning a decision made by the government does not change the fact that the government made the decision and acted on the decision.

Replies:   DBActive
DBActive 🚫

@REP

So if I decide to have sex with Charlize Theron it's the same as actually fucking her?

Dominions Son 🚫

@palamedes

Add the words Florida (leading state with bans 2500+ books) bans books to your google search.

This sub thread is over public libraries, not K-12 school libraries.

awnlee jawking 🚫

@Niceguy2000

To recap, all I asked is if the world needs amateur porn stories which are longer than the greatest works of literature?

The number of ways to kill someone versus the number of ways to have sex with someone :-)

AJ

awnlee jawking 🚫

@Dominions Son

In my opinion the "criticism" of soap opera style stories isn't any different than "criticism" of gay stories by someone who hates gay stories.

I believe even most fans of soap operas wouldn't pretend that they're particularly good.

However, someone who likes gay stories would be able to name gay stories they consider good.

IMO, criticism of soap operas is different to criticism of gay stories.

AJ

Pixy 🚫
Updated:

@Niceguy2000

But here on SOL, there is no specific reader or target audience other than the very general erotica topic

You couldn't be further from the truth. I have like six pseudo thingies simply because the genre fans DO NOT play nicely with each other.... You will find it difficult to get a lesbian to read male gay porn and vice versa with a gay male. You will find it difficult to get a heterosexual male read gay porn etc etc.

I did read what you wrote and I stand by (my) responses.

Given the calibre of some of the individuals you have called out, I'm more inclined to be of the opinion that they read your comments just fine, and that the issue may be, that you didn't put your thoughts down coherently enough and the point you were trying to make was obfuscated.

That, of course, is my reading of the situation and I could well be wrong. It won't be the first time...

EDIT: Added (my).

Michael Loucks 🚫

@Niceguy2000

I didn't call for banning anyone.

I didn't say you did. I simply commented on what @Dominions Son wrote about people complaining. I gave a reason why they do. That you took that to apply to you is on you, not me, given I wasn't responding to you.

Switch Blayde 🚫

@Niceguy2000

none of the great authors used a million and a half words to tell their story.

"War and Peace" (the poster child of long novels) is less than 600,000 words.

Dominions Son 🚫
Updated:

@Switch Blayde

War and Peace might be the poster child, but it's not the record holder.

https://www.guinnessworldrecords.com/world-records/longest-novel

A la recherche du temps perdu by Marcel Proust contains an estimated 9,609,000 characters (each letter counts as one character. Spaces are also counted, as one character each).

Doesn't give a word count, but at almost 10M characters, it almost certainly tops 1M words.

https://irisreading.com/8-very-long-books-worth-the-time-theyll-take-to-read/

#1 on that list:

. The Blah Story by Nigel Tomm – 3.2 million words

The Blah Story is the longest book ever written, published in 23 volumes. It is hard to describe what the book is about because part of it is up to you.

The concept of the book puts you behind the typewriter and conceives the text however you'd like. You'll have to download it to understand it for yourself!

#2, more of a traditional novel:

Marienbad My Love by Mark Leach – 2.5 million words

Mark Leach published Marienbad's My Love in 2008 which dwarfed all other long novels with a word count of 2.5 million words. The book reads like a summer blockbuster about the end of the world.

A Christian filmmaker finds himself stuck on a deserted island he calls Marienbad with the woman he loves. Except, she doesn't know who he is. The story takes a turn when the Apocalypse is near, but even for this Christian filmmaker, it's not how the bible describes how the world will end. If you have the time, download the ebook and see what Leach's version of the Apocalypse looks like.

Replies:   Switch Blayde
Switch Blayde 🚫

@Dominions Son

. The Blah Story by Nigel Tomm – 3.2 million words

It's actually over 11 million words.

From Johnny Hazelnut's Review of "The Blah Story":

The Blah Story is written by a pseudo-intellectual asshat named Nigel Tomm and weighs in at over 11 million words. This isn't so impressive, however, when you note the following things about it:

- 90% of the words in the novel are "blah."
- One of its many volumes (22 at last count and still going) is little more than a half-million word sentence generated by computer.
- It also contains the longest word in any book ever, which is several million characters and is also generated by computer.
- In fact, it's basically just "blah" repeated billions of times with random words stuffed in between.

Replies:   Dominions Son
Dominions Son 🚫

@Switch Blayde

In fact, it's basically just "blah" repeated billions of times with random words stuffed in between.

So it's about the parents of the kids from the Peanuts cartoons? :)

Michael Loucks 🚫
Updated:

@Switch Blayde

"War and Peace" (the poster child of long novels) is less than 600,000 words.

For context:

War and Peace, Leo Tolstoy – 587,287 words
Les Miserables, Victor Hugo – 530,982 words
Gone with the Wind, Margaret Mitchell – 418,053 words
Anna Karenina, Leo Tolstoy – 349,736 words
Moby Dick, Herman Melville – 206,052 words

Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone – 77,325 words
Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets – 84,799 words
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban – 106,821 words
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire – 190,858 words
Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix – 257,154 words
Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince – 169,441 words
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – 198,227 words

The Hobbit – 95,022 words
The Lord of the Rings – 455,125 words
The Two Towers – 143,436 words
The Return of the King – 134,462 words

A Game Of Thrones – 298,000
A Clash Of Kings – 326,000
A Storm of Swords – 424,000
A Feast For Crows – 300,000
A Dance With Dragons – 422,000

Source

My typical book is about 400,000 words (longest is 639,484; shortest is 202,351).

Replies:   Pixy
Pixy 🚫

@Michael Loucks

Do you class 'serials' as individual or as a whole?

War and peace is an individual publication (though was released serially before being edited and published as one entity later on) and in it's current form, an entire story (So would that not make it, technically, an anthology?).

Harry Potter, GOT, LOTR, are (technically) all one story split into easily digested 'parts' with 'named' chapters.

My opinion is that GOT, HP and the like, are (by themselves) 'one story' which would make them stories well over a million words in length.

Another thing to consider, is that I don't think using the length of stories before the 1950's as a bench mark is particularly valid. My reasoning for this, is that they had to be handwritten and ink and parchment was expensive. Even in later years, typewriters were slow, consumables expensive. Would Tolstoy have stopped at 580,00 odd thousand words if he could have banged out his thoughts on a keyboard and e-mailed the results to his publisher? I don't think so. I think the faster he could have put his thoughts to paper, the more he would have written.

Another limiting factor to books of the bygone ages, was the technical ability of printers at the time. Books couldn't be long because they couldn't be bound easily and longer works had spine issues. Also, transporting thick books was difficult because they didn't have lorries and planes. There was no incentive to write long novels and plenty to disincentive.

awnlee jawking 🚫

@Pixy

Another thing to consider, is that I don't think using the length of stories before the 1950's as a bench mark is particularly valid.

A certain work of fiction, written in 1611, in 783,137 words long ;-)

AJ

Replies:   Zen Master
Zen Master 🚫

@awnlee jawking

And it WAS a best-seller. It's still doing well today!
-ZM

Michael Loucks 🚫
Updated:

@Pixy

My opinion is that GOT, HP and the like, are (by themselves) 'one story' which would make them stories well over a million words in length.

Well, then 😜

A Well-Lived Life β€” 10,132,851 words
Good Medicine β€” 4,454,036 words

Climbing the Ladder β€” 1,553,503 words

On the 'publication as a serial' that was true about A Tale of Two Cities as well (one of my favorite books).

Rodeodoc 🚫

@Niceguy2000

I've had the same thought. When I see Chapter 497, I wonder if the author really has control over the timeline in the story. I've started some, ignored them for a while, then popped back to the current chapter and not missed anything. I realized it was like a soap opera. You could be a fan of General Hospital, spend 2 years in a coma, and still pick up the story when you come back to life.

Niceguy2000 🚫

@Niceguy2000

I just posted a reply to a @DS comment above...but for those you you who may miss it, I think I can be concise and basically summarize my part in this thread...

To recap, all I asked is if the world needs amateur porn stories which are longer than the greatest works of literature? :)

awnlee jawking 🚫

@Niceguy2000

To recap, all I asked is if the world needs amateur porn stories which are longer than the greatest works of literature?

Apparently it does, since people read them.

AJ

Michael Loucks 🚫
Updated:

@Niceguy2000

To recap, all I asked is if the world needs amateur porn stories which are longer than the greatest works of literature? :)

Considering peolpe happily pay for them when I am making them available gratis here, I'd say the answer is a definitive yes.

Grey Wolf 🚫

@Niceguy2000

At the risk of quibbling with something that was probably intended to be a joke, your question in turn begs the question of 'What is a 'porn' story?'

My suspicion is that there's only a moderate market. Yes, the four largest single stories on this site are 'Much Sex' (though not 'Stroke Story'), but the two that I've read generally moved to less sex, more plot.

For 'dead tree' publishing, 'Game of Thrones' has a lot of sex (and the TV series had more, perhaps at the 'much sex' level). Is it porn? Personally, I don't think so.

The mere existence of popular SoL epic-length stories doesn't necessarily mean that the world needs 'amateur porn stories'. Plus, some of the authors on here don't qualify as 'amateur' in the sense that they're getting paid (some as a career / second career) for their work. Not many, but it happens.

Not me, not yet, but that's partly been my own fault in not merchandising anything.

Niceguy2000 🚫

@Niceguy2000

I guess the people have spoken. More power to 'em! :)

Foxtrot2134 🚫

@Niceguy2000

If you think some of the stories on SOL are long, have you heard about chinese webnovels? Those regularly run into 1000s of chapters (granted, often the chapters are tiny because they're often released daily) but still, thousands of chapters are the norm and the quality is generally horrendous.
The longest one i know of actually ended at 11,745 chapters (partly because even the chinese readers had had enough of the story so the author rushed to end it).

Foxtrot2134 🚫

@Niceguy2000

Kinda interesting that this thread curved into discussing, essentially and by semi-proxy, the Comstock laws when those very laws are now coming back into focus.

Harold Wilson 🚫

@Niceguy2000

It's the hot new thingβ„’.

Back in the "Golden Age" of whatever-it-was, we had "pulp" magazines. Those magazines would publish serialized novels, and eventually serialized stories that were just ongoing stories - there was no "novel" being broken into chunks.

Some decades back, those crazy Asiatics really dug in to stories that were published in serial form. Now-a-days, we call them "Light Novels." But they definitely existed in 1950's (post-war) Japan, and have a pretty traceable history from that point. (It's possible they go farther back. I haven't looked.) They started as serialized stories, then added illustrations. Then the clever publishers crossed the streams (because... Japan) and created magazines that were nothing but serial updates -- "Here's a bunch of serial updates in category 'Blind-girls-raped-by-tentacle-godzilla' for April 1977". (Full disclosure: I made up the category.)

As with all things furrin, some American nerds and ex-G.I. perverts brought them into the US in their new form. Just in time for the interwebs. So Korean and Japanese stories were being translated and violated (copyright, that is) back when netnews was the state of the art. Could fanfiction be far behind? Of course not - there are tentacles involved, after all!

So we had "serial" stories on rec.arts.sf and rec.arts.sf.manga and alt.fucking.everything. Then we got Geocities, and basement dwellers everywhere could fap and write self-insert fan-fiction, fap and write serials, fap and eat cheetos, etc. The stage was set!

Then people like "WildBow" (not his real name ;-) started writing in this "new format" where they could put as many words in a row as they wanted, and nobody could stop them! What's more, they could do the same thing, day in and day out. Words. More words! MOAR WURDS!! "Web serials" became a "new" category of literature.

Semi-simultaneously, a lot of people were discovering the same thing. Sites like SOL started adding support for "pagination." And suddenly writing 40,000 words and calling it a "chapter" was okay. So we got that Ascending fucking nightmare story from hell. And also "Fresh Start". I'm sure there are others - that pulp-y Werewolf space opera, and the Three Meals story, and that other one that I have blocked due to the trauma of reading it for so long and getting nowhere. (MC father and son are "Alphas". Neighbors are "Alphas." You're an alpha, and you're an alpha. Everybody's an alpha! Except the women.)

Finally, we had two of the three necessary pieces in place: we just needed money. And someone went and invented "Buy me a Coffee." And Patreon. And Podia. And fifty-five more, all ending in 'pore!

Let's call it the "altpub" industry (somebody will eventually use that phrase, might as well be me!) now exists, and it looks like this:

Write a story. Make it interesting and engaging. Get about a third of the way done. Stop.

Sign up for one of a variety of websites. (SOL is not one of them. The Noble Turnpike site is.) "Publish" your story as a serial, with X chapters posting every Y days. (Popular options are 5/7, 7/7, 2/7, 1/7.) Continue writing your story. Do various site-specific things to increase the size of your audience. Develop a following of people who are engaged with and interested in your story.

Write faster. Seriously. Now you can promise people that you have a "backlog" of chapters that will eventually be posted. But... those chapters are available RIGHT GODDAMN NOW on your PayMeBitches.com page for only $3 a month. (Or whatever.)

Eventually, you will write so many chapters that you'll have enough to "publish" a "book." Create a Firewood Limitless author account on Rainforest dot com, bundle up the first 200 chapters of your story. Pay someone to make you some cover art (for best result, it should include a genre-appropriate girl with fucking huge tits). Pull the
first 200 chapters down (you can keep the first 2 or 3 up as a teaser, I think) from whatever website(s) you are using. Repeat this process every 200 * Y / X days, approximately.

Profit!

If you're feeling particularly ballsy, you can do it without using the serialization website. WildBow has done this several times. PirateAba has "sort of" done it, because they were using a serialization site, in parallel with their own domain, then dropped off the serializer.

FWIW, I saw Patreon numbers from two authors (Pirate and one I haven't mentioned) a few years back. They were making plastic-surgeon money, and not paying malpractice insurance. Before whatever revenue they got from the Rainforest. So this seems like a valid way to monetize monotony.

That said, it's hard to write "Slice of Life" stories and keep people interested. I have bailed out on many stories. But new authors keep popping up, and the stories are generally entertaining for the first however-many chapters. So it is possible to enjoy them as an aggregate without entirely enjoying any single one of them. Just bail out when you get tired, and keep turning over new writers.

Replies:   Grey Wolf
Grey Wolf 🚫

@Harold Wilson

Another solution to the 'keeping people interested' problem (and one I haven't used and don't intend to use) is to do what traditional authors do: write N volumes. Wrap up the story in the Nth volume. Start a new story.

Even better, if you can manage it, is to write six stories, interleaving volumes of each. Now it takes much longer to get to N for each, readers are constantly 'rediscovering' each story, and the boredom threshold goes up.

You could change pseudonyms for each, but you're probably better off not doing that, I suspect.

Nothing against it, if the stories continue to be interesting. One of the problems for some stories is the problem of continual escalation: if your story involves fighting against a 'big bad', every 'big bad' must be bigger and badder than the previous 'big bad'. Some 'clever' authors bring in a new 'big bad' before the old 'big bad' is disposed of, which goes wrong far more often than it goes right.

Many times a story starts out perfectly well, and it's the escalation that kills it.

Replies:   Zen Master
Zen Master 🚫

@Grey Wolf

Another solution to the 'keeping people interested' problem (and one I haven't used and don't intend to use) is to do what traditional authors do: write N volumes. Wrap up the story in the Nth volume. Start a new story.

...Did you just...threaten to never end VoaT? Keep it going forever? The man's gotta die sooner or later!

I hope you really meant "When VoaT is finally done I'm gonna be done writing, too. This shit is HARD!" :)
-ZM

awnlee jawking 🚫
Updated:

@Zen Master

Keep it going forever? The man's gotta die sooner or later!

The overriding story arc concerns the multiple realities, the resurrections, and the invincibility against large motor vehicles. In that respect, the story's barely started ;-)

AJ

Replies:   Paladin_HGWT  Grey Wolf
Paladin_HGWT 🚫

@awnlee jawking

The overriding story arc concerns the multiple realities, the resurrections, and the invincibility against large motor vehicles. In that respect, the story's barely started ;-)

WHOA!

Grey Wolf 🚫

@awnlee jawking

the invincibility against large motor vehicles

Dunno. So far the score for large motor vehicles is: vehicles 1, characters 1.

Admittedly, the vehicle's win is also a 'win' for the character :) but that's not so much invincibility as merely superior recovery.

I'm really not planning to branch out into other VoaT-connected universes, with the exception that a short story set with some known-but-not-in-the-primary-universe character isn't impossible. It'd be interesting to see a few scenes in first-life universes, but only a few are 'worthy'.

Grey Wolf 🚫
Updated:

@Zen Master

Nah, that's not what I meant :) I can see reading it that way, though.

My comment was more about semi-arbitrary endings. I can think of many (many!) multi-volume stories where the eventual 'ending' feels pretty arbitrary. Why end it there? Because the author ran out of ways to extend the story and keep it interesting, so that story retired and a new story came in.

I've even got one story I'm reading where the author set up plenty of 'big bad' to carry the story through a few more volumes, but mostly threw up their hands at one point and switched gears into 'nothing bad is going to happen, but let's see what happens with the characters' writing. Which is interesting, but leaves the 'big bad' firmly unresolved. The presumption is, the lead is now powerful enough to smack them down, but we have no way of really knowing that.

When VoaT is finally done (presuming that happens :) ) I have at least three other stories I really want to write. It's not impossible I'll start writing another one overlapping with VoaT, but that will likely not happen until I'm retired, at least. This shit is HARD! (for some values of 'HARD!') and I can't juggle overlapping stories right now.

Heck, I've got a Halloween story I've been working on occasionally since 2021 and a Valentine's story I'd like to do. Both are 'short' (guessing novella-length) and I have a goodly chunk of the Halloween story semi-written.

I also have chunks of two VoaT side stories written.

Even those are too distracting, right now.

Slightly belated P.S.:

What I'm talking about would be much more akin to ending Book 5 (or 6, since it's started) with an epilogue saying, "They got married, were incredibly happy, got terribly rich, had great kids, and made the world a better place" or (perhaps even more so) with an epilogue set 'Twenty Years Later' showing the kids' first visit to Disneyland Hong Kong, giving them a bunch of names and one-sentence personalities, but with no depth at all.

(And, just in case: It is not canonical that any characters will go to Disneyland Hong Kong at any time, nor that there will definitely be kids. Both seem entirely possible, but they're not canonical at this time.)

An epilogue by itself isn't bad, but one which leaves major plot-lines unresolved and just adds questions can be an annoying way to end a series. Still, it saves the author from writing a disappointing next book, which may be the alternative.

nihility 🚫

@Niceguy2000

There are authors who write a movie plot.

There are authors who write a TV show plot.

There are authors who write General Hospital.

I enjoy them all, because my expectations fit.

muyoso 🚫
Updated:

@Niceguy2000

I am reading a story now which is just absurd with the level of detail in the story. And I don't mean that in a good way. The author spends an endless amount of time describing different Microsoft software products that are used, tasks that are completed, subtasks that are completed, and I am just sitting there like . . . why the fuck do we have to know all of this information?? None of it will be relevant in the story at all. The author is just word vomiting as much meaningless detail into the story like he is padding a book report to fit the teachers minimum page count. I am 8 chapters into this book now and maybe 5 paragraphs of actual plot have been discussed, and probably 110 paragraphs about assembling furniture, which tools were used, which software was purchased, who was using what software when, etc etc etc. Its ABSURD. A proper editor would probably slaughter this book down to a 2 chapter short story, which is sad, because of what minuscule amount of plot there is, isn't horrible.

If I could give advice to any author out there, have a dispassionate text to speech system read you back your story before you post. It will catch every single grammar mistake and make it super obvious where they are and it will make it obvious when you are just bukkakeing the reader with nonsense that is irrelevant to the story.

Replies:   Pixy
Pixy 🚫

@muyoso

At face value, it certainly sounds like padding, but would need more detail. Does the author normally write like that? Has the author already hit the Premier threshold (ie, he is deliberately padding to hit the Premier threshold)?

Another scenario, is that the author may either skirt around the fringes of autism, or be fully submerged. That would lead to an uncontrollable desire to be exactly right on procedure for certain things.

mrherewriting 🚫

@Niceguy2000

I feel the same way about comic books.

Spider-Man has 900 issues so far? What the hell man? Why isn't his story over?

awnlee jawking 🚫

@mrherewriting

Spider-Man has 900 issues so far? What the hell man? Why isn't his story over?

Thank whoever the protagonist isn't Spider-Cat, or it would be 8100 issues ;-)

AJ

LupusDei 🚫
Updated:

@mrherewriting

The very simple answer, obvious even, is that it sells. People are apparently happy enough to buy those 900+ issues.

Replies:   mrherewriting
mrherewriting 🚫

@LupusDei

Even in forums, some sarcasm shouldn't need /s.

Mushroom 🚫

@mrherewriting

Spider-Man has 900 issues so far? What the hell man?

And that is actually spread over a great many titles. Many of them printed concurrently.

At this time, the only one being printed is "The Amazing Spider-Man", which is always current to the real time it is written in. But there have been others, including some locked in the 1960s when it was first created, and others that concentrated on other things. Team-ups, alternate versions, with or without various suits and powers, and the like.

In the 80s it got a little crazy, as I want to say there were 4 or 5 being made at the same time, each different. Some in the past, some with him still in High School, others with him in College. But after the comic book crash of the 1990s they started to cull out a lot of the extra titles.

Heck, I even remember in the mid-1970s we had "Spidey Super Stories", which were stories for younger kids and written in cooperation with Children's Television Workshop and their "Electric Company" show. Low in violence, and featuring the cast in the issues (including Morgan Freeman).

The only two currently made regularly are the Amazing Spider-Man, and the Miles Morales Spider-Man.

Replies:   mrherewriting
mrherewriting 🚫

@Mushroom

I've said it once, I'll say it again, some sarcasm shouldn't need /s.

Replies:   Dicrostonyx
Dicrostonyx 🚫

@mrherewriting

I've said it once, I'll say it again, some sarcasm shouldn't need /s.

Keep in mind that English isn't everyone's first language. While most English natives should be able to detect blatant sarcasm without a tag, people for whom this is their second, fourth, or sixth language might have some trouble.

I used to work with a guy who was very smart and witty but most of our co-workers didn't realise it because his English was so poor. His native languages were Vietnamese and French. He was fluent in Cantonese and knew a lot of Mandarin. He could get by in Indonesian and Malay (which, granted, are very similar). But he wasn't taught English until he was over 40 and had some difficulty with it. He had trouble detecting spoken sarcasm, but give him time to think or talk to him in French and he could talk circles around you.

Replies:   mrherewriting
mrherewriting 🚫

@Dicrostonyx

give him time to think or talk to him in French and he could talk circles around you.

Je l'ai dit une fois, je le répète, certains sarcasmes ne devraient pas avoir besoin de /s.

Dicrostonyx 🚫

@mrherewriting

Spider-Man has 900 issues so far?

Honestly, I'd be very surprised if it's that low and that number is probably only counting very specific series.

Spider-Man premiered in 1962 in Amazing Stories #15 and got his own title in March, 1963 with Amazing Spider-Man. 61 years times twelve months per year plus an annual and a few specials is easily over 800 issues.

In the '90s, Spider-Man, Superman, and the X-Men were the top three most popular characters (precise order shifted month to month). As a result they each had multiple titles. Spider-Man and Superman had 4 main-line titles, one each week, each following slightly different story elements but considered to be canon and happening at the same time.

On top of this there are all sorts of long-running alternate universe versions of the character, such as the Ultimate Universe, 2099, and Marvel Knights. All the spin-off but connected characters, like Spider-Girl (Peter Parker & Mary Jane's daughter) and Scarlet Spider (a maybe clone who assumed a new identity). Plus countless miniseries, crossovers, and adjacent characters.

And if you think this is crazy, you should check out Perry Rhodan some time. It's a German shared universe space opera series that has been publishing 66-page "booklet novels" (ie, novellas) weekly since 1961. As of 2019 there were over 3,000 novellas, 850 novels in a spin-off series, and tonnes of other materials in a millennia-long story broken up into story arcs that each range between 25 to 100 novellas. In 1986 the series celebrated 1 billion issues sold.

Replies:   mrherewriting
mrherewriting 🚫
Updated:

@Dicrostonyx

Honestly, I'd be very surprised if it's that low and that number is probably only counting very specific series.

The Amazing Spider-Man: The title reached 900 issues in 2022.

The last thing I was going to do for a sarcastic post was look up every detail of every Spider-Man titled comic. But for those with OCD (or a hard-on) for looking up and sharing facts on sarcastic posts, I say, "Haha."

Eddie Davidson 🚫

@Niceguy2000

it takes as long as it takes to read the story. No one is saying they are JRR Tolkein but if he took your advice, we would be really missing out on something special.

Dominions Son 🚫

@Niceguy2000

I'm trained as a journalist where brevity and getting to the point is valued.

In non-fiction writing. The same does not necessarily apply to fiction or at least not to the same degree.

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