- Joined
- Oct 16, 2005
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See, my cousin and I decided to get together and write a novel; that was when I decided to be a writer. However, due to distance and the demandings of the story itself, it's not going to be an ordinary five-book saga.
The first two books are kind of paralel stories, stories that happen to two different MC's (actually, two sets of twins), but it happens during the same time frame (a year). The same goes true for books 3 and 4.
Book 3 is the continuatino of book 1 and book 4 is the continuation of book 2. Books 3 and 4 also happen during the same timeframe, and the MC's stories start drawing close, but they don't meet yet.
And then, during book 5, the stories get together finally, and the MC's get together for the final bout, their stories are completely interlaced and can't be sepparated.
My question is, is this concept new? I mean, is there someone out there who has tried a series that was not exactly linear? How marketeable is this idea, would someone like it?
The first two books are kind of paralel stories, stories that happen to two different MC's (actually, two sets of twins), but it happens during the same time frame (a year). The same goes true for books 3 and 4.
Book 3 is the continuatino of book 1 and book 4 is the continuation of book 2. Books 3 and 4 also happen during the same timeframe, and the MC's stories start drawing close, but they don't meet yet.
And then, during book 5, the stories get together finally, and the MC's get together for the final bout, their stories are completely interlaced and can't be sepparated.
My question is, is this concept new? I mean, is there someone out there who has tried a series that was not exactly linear? How marketeable is this idea, would someone like it?
My co-author and I have been writing together for ten years, have 7 books written and on their way to the shelf and are still very good friends. It can be done, but it does take effort to make sure that we each hold up our share. Sometimes this means that when life sucks for one of us, the other one CAN take up the brunt of the writing. It's like a marriage. 50/50 is wonderful when you can get it -- but more often it's 90/10 or 10/90. But partners support each other even in rough times. It merely takes dedication to an exceptional product.
Nope. We're both girls -- and not THAT sort of "friends!" I'm happily married and she's a single mom.