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How to Finish a Book Series

Happy Wednesday! 

As I finished writing the final book in The Archive Series, I found myself thinking about what makes an ending a good ending. How do I finish out a story well? I wish I had asked myself this question with the St. Croix Falls series and I wish that I didn't feel like I had rushed to the end so much with that one. But with this one I want to do it well. I want to do better than I did with my trilogy and I want to grow as a writer. 

These characters deserve a good ending, my readers will deserve a good ending. One that will tie everything together. And, of course, because I am obsessed, my first thought was Julie Plec and Kevin Williamson (creators and writers of The Vampire Diaries) and the final season of that show. Right before the final episode of the series aired, The CW showed a special extra as a way to say goodbye to the show full of interviews of the cast and crew and looking back on the series. Maybe it was in this special extra or maybe it was in a different interview I saw, but I remember Julie Plec and Kevin Williamson pondering what it means to end a series well. I think it was Kevin Williamson who said saying goodbye to the characters and story is almost as important or even more important than how we said hello to them. 

On several occasions I heard from not just the writers of TVD, but other writers of some of my other favorite TV shows talk about how the final season, the goodbye of the show, should be about the heart of the show. Sure, some of the other seasons and episodes may have been about different things and different characters, but the final one should show the heart and the over-arcing theme of the show. Those final episodes should tell the watchers what the writers wanted to say throughout the making of that show and tie all the themes together with a perfect bow.

Honestly, not a lot of show succeed at that. I think book writers do a much better job at saying farewell to their characters, but as I sat back for a few weeks and thought about how I wanted to end my series those were the two thoughts that came to mind. Saying goodbye should be just as important - if not more so important - than how we said hello and how the goodbye should tell the readers (or watchers) the heart of the story. 

The hello is there to hook the reader, but by the time the goodbye comes around, the reader is already invested - if you did your job well. By the goodbye, the reader cares how the story ends and it's up to us as the writers to give them an ending worth remembering. 

With all that said, at the moment, I am the only one who has seen this series from beginning to end. Only two - maybe three - other people have read Golden Touch. So, while I think it is important to keep readers in mind, right now, I'm thinking more about how to honor my characters and my story. They've helped me through a lot of hard stuff and they've been through some hard stuff themselves, so I want their goodbye to be worthy of them. I want their goodbye to mean something and to do the series justice. 

If you're going to kill off a character at the end, do it well. There are - or will be - readers out there who absolutely love that character. Those readers, and the character, deserve to go out strong. There are plenty of character deaths I've read and watched that were horribly done and left me feeling really annoyed and sad because I loved that character so much and the writer decided to kill them off. The writer didn't even give the character the decency of a good send off either. So, at the end of a series, if you're going to kill off a character, don't rush it. Give the other characters and your reader time to mourn on the page. Give them a proper goodbye. 

If there's romance, deliver it! Let those two characters your readers have been shipping come together at the end. Give them that kiss, that romantic moment they've been waiting for. 

Make sure that all the loose ends are tied together, that your readers won't be left with too many unanswered questions. 

Really, at the end of it, finishing a series well means finally completing the puzzle. Throughout the series, you've been giving the readers puzzle pieces here and there. Now, on the final book, it's time to fit all the pieces together and show them the picture you've been working toward.

What are some of your favorite series endings? Do you like happily ever afters or bittersweet endings? 

Comments

  1. My favorite ending of a book series has to be the end of The Wingfeather Saga. That ending was absolutely brilliant. Looking at TV shows, the writers of Warehouse 13 did an *excellent* job with their ending. I enjoy endings that wrap up everything important, but also leave room for imagining what would come next.

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    1. Cool! I've heard of Warehouse 13 and it sounds good, especially if it has a great ending! I'm always more willing to watch an already finished TV show if I know it ends well haha I don't mind when a book or TV series ends the story with room for the imagination, but I feel like sometimes, TV shows especially, take it too far and leave things too open ended haha

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  2. Great post. Lots to think about.
    I agree with Ariel that the series finale of Warehouse 13 was amazing. I also liked the finale of Buffy the Vampire Slayer.
    Killing off characters can be really tricky. So many writers kill off a character just to shock people, and that's pretty frustrating.
    Happily ever afters are my favorite, but bittersweet endings are fine with me, too. Just as long as I felt like the story has been wrapped up well.

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    1. Thanks!
      I may have to try Warehouse 13, it sounds good! Yes! I thought the Buffy finale was really good too. :b
      Yeah I agree. A lot of times a character dying is just for the shock value and doesn't add anything to the plot.
      Same, I don't mind either, though I think I do lean more toward happily ever after's when writing my books haha

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  3. I think my favorite endings have always been a bit open ended. I like when it feels like the story is still going to continue, but it has to be satisfying too.

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    1. I agree! I don't mind if it's a little open ended or leaves room for the imagination, but it also has to be a good, satisfying ending too. :)

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